tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4349727365634393854.post6366652487980371974..comments2024-03-20T05:14:32.180-05:00Comments on James Wappel Miniature Painting: Making use of the baseswappellioushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11545341272914600283noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4349727365634393854.post-55848929475539974672014-02-10T14:51:48.395-06:002014-02-10T14:51:48.395-06:00It's a basic process of a pin in each foot (or...It's a basic process of a pin in each foot (or sometimes just one), with the hole drilled into the base. I put the figure onto the base a few times first so that it does not get stuck with glue on it, which is never good!wappellioushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11545341272914600283noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4349727365634393854.post-75543462462589205452014-02-10T11:56:44.841-06:002014-02-10T11:56:44.841-06:00Which reminds me to ask:
how do you attach your fi...Which reminds me to ask:<br />how do you attach your figures to your bases?<br />Pin in the feet, hole in the base, and then?<br />Superglue in the hole, or superglue against the feet, or on the wire-pin.<br />Problem I regularly rncounter is that the glue sets before<br />the pin is completely in the base.<br />Even then it is carefull, when the feet dó touch the base,<br />not to have super glue coming out from between the feet and base.<br /><br />With the pin firmly glued into the sculpey,<br />never encountered that the figure could wobble free?<br /><br />C ya<br />PascalAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17161580884150526016noreply@blogger.com