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Guild Ball Hunter's Guild by Lawnor

Guild Ball Hunter's Guild by Lawnor

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Basing

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Last month AssetDrop shipped me a new selection of basing materials to produce what they called a Baked Canyon effect.  My plan has been to test this out on my hunters.  Here’s what they say can be done with it and what was in he box:

Army Painter Wet Mud Effects basing paint
Serious Play Canyon Small Tuft Variety
Serious Play Baked Canyon Landscape Texture

Their guide says the mud will dry with a wet finish so I should varnish everything first to preserve this.  I’ve worked with textured paint before and I am aware that you often get cracks and can see through the paint to whats beneath so I chose to undercoat everything with P3 Bloodtracker brown, as this appeared to be a similar colour to the mud.  I also painted the rock the wolf is on with this.  The rock also got a wash with Agrax Earthshade, and drybrushed with P3 Beast Hide and then p3 Hammerfall Khaki.  The rims of the bases were then painted black and everything was given a coat of Gloss Varnish and then Matt Varnish via my airbrush.

The bases were undercoated.  Unfortunately I was caught up in the momentum and forgot to take more step by step photosThe bases were undercoated. Unfortunately I was caught up in the momentum and forgot to take more step by step photos
The wet mud... wel, ... wetThe wet mud... wel, ... wet
The wet mud effect after it has setThe wet mud effect after it has set

The mud took many hours to dry and I ended up leaving overnight, so in the end it got perhaps 20 hours to dry before I worked with it, but those photos are 8-9 hours apart.  At this stage I’m really not impressed with the effect.  I can see the masking tape through it and its not got any kind of texture or effect to it.  I’m thinking I could have just left it with just the paint and had the same effect.  perhaps I applied it too thin or too thick?  Who knows?  the GW textured paints are better than this.

I’m trying to test AssetDrops guide and supplies though so I pushed on.  I glued everyone to their bases, and then tidied up the rims with more black paint where needed.  I then glued at least one tuft to each of the bases, consuming the whole pack.  I’ve switched from Loctite Precision to Gorilla Glue recently and their bottles have a brush built in to them.  Its always seemed a little weird.  Why don’t the bristles just dry up in to a lump?  This seemed like a great time to experiment with it.  Turns out the bristles are more like plastic tooth brush bristles than paint brush bristles.  Seems to work well, but not good for finesse work.  I would also want to warn everyone to do this in a well ventilated area as the fumes are so much stronger and were burning my eyes throughout.

My setup after burying a few bases in the trail mixMy setup after burying a few bases in the trail mix

I was working over a clean sheet of newspaper with a solid fold in it on top of a clean tray so I could salvage all the overspill.  I found pouring a little in to a shot glass allowed me to apply the mix with a lot more control than if I had poured it from the bag.  On the whole I liked this mix, but I feel the cork chunks were often too large.  Same with some of the bright green sponge pieces.  It could have used a little longer in the blender. The models remained buried for 5 minutes before having the excess tapped off, and then brushed down gently with an old toothbrush.

So how did this end up?  On to the next and final post to find out.

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