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Made in us
Bloodthirsty Chaos Knight





Las Vegas

Looking for some interesting ideas on wood elves bases. I don't want to just spread glue and flock and call it a day, but I'm not really sure what else I can do for the smaller bases. I also live in the middle of a desert, so getting any sort of natural materials is pretty difficult.

   
Made in gb
Infiltrating Broodlord






We had the LOTR wood elves - we drybrushed, through the browns - and added pizza herbs, great for that fallen leaves look.

   
Made in us
Angry Blood Angel Assault marine





Close to Maddness, Far from Safe

the small bases are very hard to base with any amount of fun. I normally lay on some of GW mud on the base then glue a small amount of flock to make a pretty neat looking natural base.

If your looking for something more foresty then I guess if you can find something to use as leaves on your bases that would look cool.

Check out my little ork story I am working on here!

http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/632365.page

 
   
Made in us
Bloodthirsty Chaos Knight





Las Vegas

Hivefleet Oblivion wrote:We had the LOTR wood elves - we drybrushed, through the browns - and added pizza herbs, great for that fallen leaves look.


Oh hey, never thought about that. Might have to raid the kitchen and do some experimenting!

Ecstasy in Service wrote:the small bases are very hard to base with any amount of fun. I normally lay on some of GW mud on the base then glue a small amount of flock to make a pretty neat looking natural base.

If your looking for something more foresty then I guess if you can find something to use as leaves on your bases that would look cool.


I've never used GW mud, about what consistency does that come out as? I've got some putties and other similar materials at hand that I've used before, maybe I'll just try to get a nice little uneven muddy look.

   
Made in gb
Infiltrating Broodlord






 Evertras wrote:
Hivefleet Oblivion wrote:We had the LOTR wood elves - we drybrushed, through the browns - and added pizza herbs, great for that fallen leaves look.


Oh hey, never thought about that. Might have to raid the kitchen and do some k.

it's the dried oregano and basil that seem to work best. I actually tried dyeing them orange for some autumn themed ones I was working on, but lost the jar. it's possible I made an autumn-themed pizza by accident. The herbs work well with a rich dark base, the old scorched Brown with a mid brown, I thnk bestial brown, dry brush (this was just beach sand and PVA).

   
Made in us
Bloodthirsty Chaos Knight





Las Vegas

From the sounds of it I assume you didn't primer over them. How did they fare with tabletop use?

   
Made in us
Gargantuan Gargant





Binghamton, NY

Dried herbs do make for surprisingly good foliage (smell nice, to boot ). As Hivefleet Oblivion says, smaller, thinner leaves (oregano, basil) work best, as they shrink down and break apart nicely while drying. Larger leaves (bay), twig-like leaves (rosemary), and traditionally ground herbs (sage) won't do you much good.

More traditional flock (not talking dyed sawdust, here, but the finely ground colored foam, as opposed to static grass) makes for nice, fluffy moss. Texture paste (GW texture paint works, although generic ones from Liquitex, Vallejo, etc. can easily be colored for a cheaper bulk basing option) soil (dark, rich colors are most appropriate), patches of flock moss, and a scattering of herbs for fallen leaves would give a nice approximation of a healthy forest floor. Sculpting some roots or adding the odd shallowly protruding rock on larger bases would add a bit more character, when you have the space.

[edit:] Evertras: If you're asking about the resilience of the herbs when used as leaf scatter, it's pretty low. They're quite thin and crunchy, after all. That said, how frequently do you poke the tops of your bases? The glue used to attach them and the varnish that usually goes over the top helps, certainly, but their acceptable longevity is due more to their placement in a relatively protected area. Loading up on adhesive, as one might when making oregano vines (just a bead of PVA on a surface with the herb sprinkled on and smushed in) makes them more or less bulletproof, as the process becomes something like a cross between a mosaic and decoupage - the herb is completely locked into a matrix of glue or becomes a skin over, unable to chip off and break free, in either case.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/09/16 19:35:07


The Dreadnote wrote:But the Emperor already has a shrine, in the form of your local Games Workshop. You honour him by sacrificing your money to the plastic effigies of his warriors. In time, your devotion will be rewarded with the gift of having even more effigies to worship.
 
   
 
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