A few years ago two parents went out for dinner. A few hours later the babysitter was calling to see if she could cover the clown statue in the kids' room. The father said " Get the kids out if the house, we'll cal the police, we don't have a clown statue". The "clown statue" was actually a killer that escaped from jail. If you don't post this on 10 videos tonight the clown will be in your bed at 3:00am with a chainsaw in his hand. Sorry don't want this to happen to me
A few years ago two parents went out for dinner. A few hours later the babysitter was calling to see if she could cover the clown statue in the kids' room. The father said " Get the kids out if the house, we'll cal the police, we don't have a clown statue". The "clown statue" was actually a killer that escaped from jail. If you don't post this on 10 videos tonight the clown will be in your bed at 3:00am with a chainsaw in his hand. Sorry don't want this to happen to me
Instead of using green stuff, can you use firm polymer clay instead? I know it is not as soft as green stuff. But with this type of clay, it seems that it would be easier to sculpt finer details. The clay that Im talking about is Super Sculpey FIRM Clay, in case you want to look it up. But then again, the sculpting would probably take longer because of its firmness. And for the drying part, I would put the clay itself in an oven, then glue it on the miniature.
@HolyVegeta yes you can use polymer clays. Corvus Beli sculpts all of their miniatures from fimo and they look amazing. Also you can boil polymer clay for about 30 seconds and it will get hard. No need to waste time cooking it.
I'm currently onto Space Wolves and would love to have some pannels on the tanks with imagery from their past and lore, I think things like that add depth to models.
I've tried to learn how to better my greenstuff work but even though it gets to a consistent colour I find it's tricky to mould into more delicate shapes like faces. Are there any tips or advice you could offer? Keep up the great work :)
greenstuff is a (i thnk) epoxy based sculpting putty from GamesWorkshop to fill gaps in models, attach model parts, create your own details or make very elaborate things as shown in this video :)
So what are the advantages of using green stuff over polymer clays?
timmytapeworm13 22 hours ago
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A few years ago two parents went out for dinner. A few hours later the babysitter was calling to see if she could cover the clown statue in the kids' room. The father said " Get the kids out if the house, we'll cal the police, we don't have a clown statue". The "clown statue" was actually a killer that escaped from jail. If you don't post this on 10 videos tonight the clown will be in your bed at 3:00am with a chainsaw in his hand. Sorry don't want this to happen to me
DSbaby15 3 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
A few years ago two parents went out for dinner. A few hours later the babysitter was calling to see if she could cover the clown statue in the kids' room. The father said " Get the kids out if the house, we'll cal the police, we don't have a clown statue". The "clown statue" was actually a killer that escaped from jail. If you don't post this on 10 videos tonight the clown will be in your bed at 3:00am with a chainsaw in his hand. Sorry don't want this to happen to me
DSbaby15 3 weeks ago
Instead of using green stuff, can you use firm polymer clay instead? I know it is not as soft as green stuff. But with this type of clay, it seems that it would be easier to sculpt finer details. The clay that Im talking about is Super Sculpey FIRM Clay, in case you want to look it up. But then again, the sculpting would probably take longer because of its firmness. And for the drying part, I would put the clay itself in an oven, then glue it on the miniature.
HolyVegeta 7 months ago
@HolyVegeta yes you can use polymer clays. Corvus Beli sculpts all of their miniatures from fimo and they look amazing. Also you can boil polymer clay for about 30 seconds and it will get hard. No need to waste time cooking it.
Darius12235 2 months ago
you make it look easy
tirinite42 7 months ago
Good god man you have skills!
I'm currently onto Space Wolves and would love to have some pannels on the tanks with imagery from their past and lore, I think things like that add depth to models.
I've tried to learn how to better my greenstuff work but even though it gets to a consistent colour I find it's tricky to mould into more delicate shapes like faces. Are there any tips or advice you could offer? Keep up the great work :)
AWishToAsgard 8 months ago
what is green stuff?
Darkvirtue9 9 months ago
@Darkvirtue9
greenstuff is a (i thnk) epoxy based sculpting putty from GamesWorkshop to fill gaps in models, attach model parts, create your own details or make very elaborate things as shown in this video :)
FearGFX 9 months ago
wow mind blowing wrk man
clandestine22NDman 10 months ago
Amazing and inspirational :)
ravagevii 10 months ago
Nice work I find green stuff hard to work with but u have mo problem
mollydogwoofwoof 1 year ago
@mollydogwoofwoof try milliput
suposedly its alot less sticky and much easier to work with. buts its not as flexible after it dries
antijelly 11 months ago
Excellent!!! Bud you are a great Artist!!!
You have to show me how is the finished sculpt ;D
Nusphigore 1 year ago