I have been on a terrain building bout recently working on my old school wind generator and a small forest of trees. I have always wanted to make some big rock pillars and cliff faces for my terrain set as well. Thus, it was finally time to get a hot foam cutter and give carving foam a go!
The Back Story
This story actually starts with nothing related to hobby or gaming at all. Recently I finished my (long overdue) PhD. I had a rough run with project changes, supervisor changes and other issues. This meant that my 3 to 4 year PhD dragged out to about 6 years when I finally handed it up. But the good news is that it came back from my examiners with top marks and no changes - which is kind of a big deal in science. Then at my graduation I took out the best thesis award - a cool thing to put in my CV but it also came with a relatively small cash prize of $500. In order to get through the end of my PhD with no grant money, no scholarship, no income, and having a kid, mortgage, Uni tuition and all the adult stuff, I had to make sacrifices by selling off a heap of my 'pre marriage' toys. This included my cool MX-5, music equipment and a selection of models (I managed to hold on to all of my retro stuff including all of my Praetorians and Necrons). This is all relevant back story because knowing how rough that was, my wife was more than happy for me to convert all of my prize into hobby funds! "You earned it" she said.
I haven't spent the lot but I have picked up a few cool things. First was a massive second-hand Battle Foam bag. I got a smaller PACK GO bag years ago and I use it all the time. I had been finding it a little small in recent times so when I saw this bag go up in local Buy-Swap-Sell group I snapped it up.
My second buy was an Imperial Knight Renegade set, because... two Knights, so much awesome! Finally my third item was a foam cutting set. I went for a mid-rage starter set that came with a hot wire cutter, a hot knife and an instructional DVD.
Working with foam is usually the messiest thing in the world. This however, wasn't at all. The carved pieces came off in clean sections so there is no tiny bits of foam blowing all around the room (much to my wife's relief).
So that has been my adventures carving foam so far. It is way way easier than I thought it would be. I know lots of people make their own hot wire cutters but after using my two I think buying a proper set was definitely worth it.
Thanks for stopping by folks,
Tally Ho!
The Back Story
This story actually starts with nothing related to hobby or gaming at all. Recently I finished my (long overdue) PhD. I had a rough run with project changes, supervisor changes and other issues. This meant that my 3 to 4 year PhD dragged out to about 6 years when I finally handed it up. But the good news is that it came back from my examiners with top marks and no changes - which is kind of a big deal in science. Then at my graduation I took out the best thesis award - a cool thing to put in my CV but it also came with a relatively small cash prize of $500. In order to get through the end of my PhD with no grant money, no scholarship, no income, and having a kid, mortgage, Uni tuition and all the adult stuff, I had to make sacrifices by selling off a heap of my 'pre marriage' toys. This included my cool MX-5, music equipment and a selection of models (I managed to hold on to all of my retro stuff including all of my Praetorians and Necrons). This is all relevant back story because knowing how rough that was, my wife was more than happy for me to convert all of my prize into hobby funds! "You earned it" she said.
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My little man tries out my doctor bonnet. |
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Loads of space for all of my foam! |
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Hot Knife |
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Hot Wire Cutter |
Going Crazy with Foam!
The evening that I got it I gave the DVD a quick look then grabbed a block of foam, plugged in the hot knife and started cutting!It was incredibly impressed by how quick and easy making this was. From first cut to this stage only took about half an hour and that included stopping to take photos and watching TV.
At this point I realised that rock pillars frequently have rock mounds around their bases. So I decided to carve a base for my pillar.
While carving away I had been posting pics to my hobby facebook group. Muppet (Liam) had mentioned that I might have issues painting it. To see if I would I pulled out some craft paint, mixed up a tan colour and went for it. Fortunately the paint went on easy as!
At the end of the evening I sat it on my desk pretty happy with my hot knife.
The following night I glued slate and rocks to the base.
With that, I called my first pillar success and was eager to try something else...
I bashed that out in one night and added a rough base too.
On my next free evening I carved up the base and added a few smaller pillars.
The following weekend I painted it up and sat it outside to dry.
Even though it was still wet I wasn't content to just leave it be so I rolled out my gaming mat and surrounded it by some trees to see how it looked all together.
The my little dude did his best to photo bomb every shot, so we played peekaboo between the trees.
The big pillar does sit flat, I have it siting on foam in the photos above so I wound't get paint on my gaming mat.
A few days later I glued rocks onto the base and left it on my (very dead) lawn to dry.
After that I got all confident and thought I'd try a cliff face. I used a foam esky that I got from my Lab at work. [I think esky is an Aussie term? It think it is called an ice boxe overseas?]
I flipped it over, drew a line down the middle and cut it in half.
I am going to put both sides next to each other to make a 4ft long cliff face. Here is the back of one section of the cliff.
It was hard carving straight into the foam box so I started carving up small sections to glue onto the box.
So far I am just trying to get the rough shape then I will add texturing later. I'll also try to add a few platforms so models can climb the cliff but I am mostly winging it at this stage.
So that has been my adventures carving foam so far. It is way way easier than I thought it would be. I know lots of people make their own hot wire cutters but after using my two I think buying a proper set was definitely worth it.
Thanks for stopping by folks,
Tally Ho!