C M Dodson wrote:Fantastic stuff.
The moulding technique sounds interesting.
How do you get the Greenstuff to be liquid enough to pour in a mould?
The potential here for producing casualties etc is tremendous.
Best wishes ,
Chris
Dear Chris, Green Stuff isn´t liquid. It is an elastic material which becomes fairly hard. You have to push green stuff with a certain force in the mould. It´s quite easy with small items like heads, hats, helmets or central bodies. You can use it also for many flat surfaces like roofs, tables etc.
It´s quite difficult with items with a growing diameter and very fine items like riffles or swords. And another weakness: you can´t use it to produce integral a whole man. It´s not like pewter or resin.
One advantage: it´s glue quite well to plastic bodies - and it´s pliable the first 40 minutes which make it´s interesting also for sculptural works like applications to figures (feathers, cartridges or new helmets).
https://www.greenstuffworld.com/en/55-green-stuffI buy always 2-3 bars directly from the producer which makes it cheaper than the tapes.