So you slaved over your mini arm to put a hole in it and sink the magnet just right… but you messed up the polarity and need to get it out.
The good news is I succeeded in getting the magnets out. The bad news is there was some collateral damage along the way to that end.
I looked far and wide (on the internet) for a solution that didnt involve putting new holes in the plastic. i tried stabbing a pin into the crack between the magnet and the plastic to lever it out, I put the magnets in the freezer, but in the end I resigned myself to the fact that damaging the arms was a cost I could accept to get these magnets out of their sockets.
I used the smallest drill bit I could to minimize the damage (and small drill bits are way easier to drill holes with)
I read that drilling at an angle to the magnet is best so I did that with all the arms. I also put them in the freezer for 24 hours first, since I read that the freezer can make super glue brittle.
Every magnet came out with the drill method.
The biggest room this method has for improvement in my opinion is that I wish I had some kind of net down to catch the magnets as they popped out. Some went flying but luckily none fell on the floor.
Having the magnet stack around to put the retrieved ones on asap helped with organization.Next challenge is fill the holes. Luckily a bit of shoulder isn’t too hard a texture to imitate with clay… I hopeSome of the drill holes left these raised edges around the drill entry point that will need to get trimmed down to make the shoulder look brand newIf I get lazy I can say they’re part of a gang where you have to get a hole punched in your shoulder to join…. i mean if I flex my creative muscles 😉
#hobbystreak
Note: I mentioned before I might try a soak in “super clean” to undo the glue but after I watched Goobertown Hobbies’ video on super glue where he demonstrated that super clean doesn’t actually dissolve the glue, I didn’t pursue that strategy further. Ive read people claim that the cleaner at least softens the glue but seen no demonstrations to back it up.
After I applied a dusting of scale 75 “elven gold” over the base layer of “dwarven gold.”
Compare to just the base coat:
I swear I can tell the difference but is it light trickery or because of paint? I def put paint on my brush and put the brush on the model so I’m thinking paint
#hobbystreak I did this yesterday plus a bit more purple in part to hide where I got gold on the purple parts.
Brainstorming color schemes and listening to podcasts about mini painting today.
Paint Bravely and Trapped Under Plastic podcasts.
Watched a whole ass video of goobertown and miniac talking about how they run their youtube channels as if I would ever follow in their footsteps. The curiosity got the better of me as I could have used sleep instead.
Warning to all comers: if your army ain’t in this picture, you aint the main characters of this book
Oh Wile E., why must you get cynical about a silly sci fi book? Why can’t you just enjoy it?
I can have some fun and remain critical.
For one this book has given me perspective on the cognitive dissonance baked into the depiction of the imperium of man. Like the very first page tells you that this regime is the most horrific thing you could imagine ruled by a corpse on life support powered by human sacrifice.
Kinda makes you think the imperium are villains here.
But then read on to find the imperium’s posterboys, the Ultramarines, being called heroic and noble and just rulers. Same guys that work for the decaying “carrion” emperor and his brutal dictatorship.
And then read on page 18 that in the imperium, “Even the most equitable of rulers needs must become an oppressor if they hope to keep their people alive.”
So I feel conflicted over whether this kind of writing serves as propaganda excusing parallel national defense efforts in the modern day or whether the absurd circumstances of the imperium satirize the modern national defense. I think it depends how you look at it.
On the one hand the imperium is literally under siege by armies that can’t be reasoned with and seem to want the destruction of humanity. E.g. the space bug army of tyranids that want to eat everything (they “have but a single purpose and desire: to feed” [172]) and/or mutate everything into a tyranid. So in this context the stakes are literally fight back or die. Maybe diplomacy with the hive mind could get developed one day but in the meantime the imperium sees fit to stave off the tyranid threat with war.
Here a military state gets justified, but justified because of extreme unreal circumstances which only mirror modern day justifications if you believe the enemies of your country are unreasonable monsters. which in America… well it seems like many buy into that demonization if the other rhetoric, hence the widespread racism across our history and the recent wave of discrimination against Muslims (or anyone who could be mistaken for Muslims).
But even in this scenario where humanity must fight or get eaten, how does it follow that all rulers must oppress their citizens to ensure their survival? The book gives the justification in vague terms that since each imperium planet can get isolated and beset by invaders, these circumstances necessitate oppressive government. Again we must admit that the circumstances of the imperium are unprecedented. And yet I cannot help but suspect that someone who thinks desperate situations naturally lead to oppression shows a lack of creativity. I encourage these authors to look into some real world stories of peaceful resistance to Nazis in World War 2 for evidence that fascism has been undermined without violence – see Denmark as a case study. But I recognize that for a wargame company such stories don’t sell plastic tanks the same way war stories do.
So fine, let’s imagine a world where militarization really does hold the key to survival. Even in that world I can imagine a government that doesn’t oppress their subjects. And apparently the authors do too becuase they call the Ultramarines just rulers in this very same book they say all the rulers must oppress people in? Does that mean the ultramarines oppress people but like in a noble way? Noble oppression to me is a contradiction.
Hence I think this telling of the imperium is inherently dissonant for me, at odds with my own understanding of justice. And I know enough people believe in the ends justify the means nature of the military state that I suspect the 40k authors might buy into that as well. This saddens me.
I am reminded of the documentary Citizen Four, a record of Edward Snowden’s reveal of US government mass surveillance. And in that doc a speech by then president Obama plays of him saying that in order for America to be free it had to sacrifice some privacy. That security and privacy were mutually exclusive. I think this rhetoric is disgusting. A rationalization of government overreach and a sign of paternalism in our ruling class.
So there. My thoughts on 40k logic. For reference to understand Wile E.’s politics or something.
I added back white along the edges of the arrow feathers to add contrast between those highlights and the shaded recesses I darkened with my wash.
The arrow feathers were great practice to learn on since they had clear raised edges. I knew I had the right consistency of paint on my beush when I could drag it over those edges and only leave paint on the top and leave no drips into the recesses.
As has become a custom for me now, I used flow aid with my white to get it smooth.
I also put some white on my lizardman, coloring in his teeth and nails:
I did the toenails first and they ended up the messiest. By the time I got to the teeth I had figured out how to paint more precise.
The squad post splatter paintClose up #1Close up #2
Tools needed: white, black and navy blue paint, flow aid, an old toothbrush, a palette, and some water. Plus somewhere to set up your models for splatter painting where you wont make a mess.
Flow aid can be subbed out for dish soap, allegedly, I haven’t tried that myself.
The plan: base coat the models with black primer and then some navy highlights on raised areas. Then mix up white paint with a drop if flow aid and a drop of water. Get that onto the bristles of your toothbrush. Flick the paint off the brush at your models. Voila, you’ve done it!
I chose to mount my models on a piece of wood and bring them out side for splatter time.
You can go as hard as you want with the splattering to get more or less stars. I went kinda light this time to be cautious.
To take it another step further into experimental territory though, I added some drybrushing after the splatter paint onto one model as a test.
I tried a two tone drybrush scheme: dark blue on the left and purple on the right. The muted tones gave subtle results.
I want to try adding more drybrush layers of lighter colors in here to see if that gives me a more interesting look. And after that another round of splatter stars since the drybrushing covered up some of my original ones.
This proved to be another case of learning how to use the wash. In some cases it did its job extremely well, that is, turning recesses black, but in others it merely tinted them grey.
A complication with this mini is that some of the recesses are very slight and so it takes finesse to get the wash targeted into only that recess. To compensate for this I think I will try putting a bunch of wash on and then painting over whatever gets onto the surrounding areas.
In some places where the wash worked I found the effect undesirable. On the yellow fabric folds in the back for instance, I think a brown wash would have gotten me a better look:
A humble kitchen strainer became a sawdust sifter.
After some online research I came to decide I wanted to try making some fake grass from sawdust mixed with paint. I got the sawdust for free by asking nicely for it at a local hardware store. And I had green paint laying around 🤷♂️
Other options would have included buying premade grass or making grass out of shredded foam. All of which seemed to involve harder to come by materials than sawdust. And yet all of them allegedly hold up to rough play better than sawdust 🤷♂️
I figure as a noob let me start cheap and dirty.
I thought that too many of the sawdust bits I got would be too big so I sifted out a bunch of fine sawdust to turn to grass.
Fine grains on the right, chaff on the left that I still have because maybe I will find a use for it…? Warhammer is a hoarder safe space right guys?