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"The Devourer in the Dark" Topic


15 Posts

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1,119 hits since 12 Mar 2014
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Eli Arndt12 Mar 2014 8:16 p.m. PST

I have been wanting something big, nasty, and Lovcraftian in my collection. Unfortunately, much of what I really like is either beyond my current budget or, in many cases, not released yet (Kickstarters). So, I have enlisted my own sculpting/converting skills to bring something to the collection.

Take one cheap, plastic frog, apply green stuff..and…

I blocked out the details in a quick-curing, horrid smelling putty. It only takes about 5 minutes or so to set, smells like burning hair, but allows me to set the basic forms so I can get on to the fun stuff. You also see some of the early details here, including the fleshy mass in the mouth that I later decided to get rid of.



Here you see the basic form and shape put together. I really should have put the tongue/tentacles and teeth in later, but I have a habit of growing inpatient on conversions and put it all together. This will come back to haunt me when it comes time to paint.




The next step was to blend the putty work into the original frog toy. I applied thin layers of putty over the green putty, except in areas where I wanted the smooth texture to remain. The primary tool for this process was a .05mm mechanical pencil tip with the lead pulled out. This makes a nice, find pock marking. In some areas I used the hollow end of a plastic stir stick (the red kind) for slightly large pocks. Where the patches came together, I pushed them into one another with the tip of my sculpting tool to hide the edges. There were also a few details I enhanced at this time, such as evening out the sensory lobes (top of the head) and the venom sacks (cheeks).



Once all the details had hardened and I was satisfied with the blending, I shot the whole thing in a even spray of black and a spritzing of grey. I find that this always makes a conversion or scratchbuild look better as it unifies the various details. The grey will serves as my basic pallet for what I want as a gaunt, sickly color scheme fitting a Lovecraftian terror.

The next step is to get painting, which I should be able to accomplish over the next couple of days.

-Eli

CeruLucifus12 Mar 2014 8:35 p.m. PST

That looks great, and I really appreciate the sculpting details. Enjoy painting it!

Mythicus12 Mar 2014 9:42 p.m. PST

Very nice.

53Punisher13 Mar 2014 4:57 a.m. PST

I like it, great job!

Deltapax113 Mar 2014 5:32 a.m. PST

Nice work!

cloudcaptain13 Mar 2014 7:07 a.m. PST

Wow. Nicely done!

Ron W DuBray13 Mar 2014 7:25 a.m. PST

well done

TwinMirror13 Mar 2014 7:28 a.m. PST

I love it – it would make an excellent moonbeast, too.

Redmenace13 Mar 2014 8:43 a.m. PST

I agree it would a particularly mean moonbeast.

Personal logo etotheipi Sponsoring Member of TMP13 Mar 2014 8:47 a.m. PST

Gorgeous!

Are you doing the one, or will there be several, possibly using different frogs as bases?

Personal logo Legion 4 Supporting Member of TMP In the TMP Dawghouse13 Mar 2014 9:13 a.m. PST

AAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHhhhhh ! huh?

Eli Arndt13 Mar 2014 9:19 a.m. PST

Thanks for all the kudos follks. This one has been fun to sculpt. As large as that one is (that is a 28mm mimiature its faced off against), if I do more it will be with smaller frogs.

-Eli

Eli Arndt13 Mar 2014 10:35 a.m. PST

I may have a go at it in the future. This one I did for my personal gaming and because I wanted to see if I could do it. If I sculpted one from scratch their are definitely some things that I would do a lot different. nothing that would change the figures appearance but things that would make it easier to assemble.

To be honest, the armature and the underlying structure of a sculpt is the worst and toughest part of the process for me. I can whip out total conversion all day, but getting the basic form laid down is where everything can go oh so wrong.

My sculpting kit is full of raw dolls waiting to be salvaged when inspiration strikes grin

-Eli

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