The 60mm however will have to wait until I
get some! This is it; not brilliant, but not too bad either, I particularly
like the staff/mace, which has a decent rendition of the relief-tooled
gilded-silver or plain silverwork you see on the shafts in reality.
54mm; I think it's only the four poses so I
should count my blessings - at least I have them! Paint's tatty, but it nearly
always is with these!
Earlier issue or very different second
cavity? The figure on the right's barely 50mm and I'm assuming is taken from
the original hollow-cast range, but the 'standard' sculpt, not the 40mm figure
which was visibly smaller and wore a Glengarry.
I'm not sure why I took this shot, clearly
- at the time - I was very pleased with my two tatty drummers! Or is it that
ones got a slightly squashed drum? I don't know!
Again two sculpts with the left one probably
coming via the hollow-cast range, the right-hand figure has quite good-to-fair
paint (for my sample!) but a damaged mace, thus it is trying to collect these I
guess . . . also coming to this late, all the good ones have probably been
snapped-up!
Theo's have lovely paint! The broken one
will require some Superglue 'Plastix';
paint the upper breaks with the activator pen, put two small blobs ('wettings'
really) on the lower breaks and press firmly together on a flat surface. While
you're holding them together, carefully paint round the lower break/ankle with
the activator pen to encourage some of the glue to flow back.
The glue works through capillary-action, by having the spirit in the
activator draw the glue down into the molecular structure of the polymer, like an
anchor in sand, however if you follow the instructions to the letter and coat
both surfaces you will find the glue starts to set straight away, which as that
involves it wrinkling-up and turning glass-like, leaves you with a poor join.
The activator is also a- or contains an additional- catalyst.
It's better to coat one-half of the break
and then try to draw it (the glue) back into the other half after you've got
them both lined-up and jointed flush. It's a skill or 'knack' that requires
practice, but try it using some old knackered figures to practice on - it will
help you save more valuable or rare figures later.
Another shot of Theo's, showing the marching rifleman. He does these images
on an Epson scanner, I have an Epson but I can't get results like this,
despite trying all the buttons on the 'advanced' settings, I can't get the
depth of field, and only end up with the bits touching the glass in focus, there must be an infinity setting . . . or something . . .
fussa-russa!
And thanks to Theo for the images!
lovely photos thankyou
ReplyDeleteThank you for dropping-by Lz!
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