How to show sand being kicked up?
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How to show sand being kicked up?
Hi all,
I'm thinking about making a diorama showing an action scene with sand being kicked up as the model lands.
Does anyone have any tips on how I can achieve this effect on static model?
Here's a picture of the sort of effect I'm trying to achieve :-
http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/20037 ... Image-Bank
Thanks in advance,
Cheers
HotRodNZ
I'm thinking about making a diorama showing an action scene with sand being kicked up as the model lands.
Does anyone have any tips on how I can achieve this effect on static model?
Here's a picture of the sort of effect I'm trying to achieve :-
http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/20037 ... Image-Bank
Thanks in advance,
Cheers
HotRodNZ
- Stu Pidasso
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- raser13
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instead of sand couldn't you use brown sugar over the cotton??? or maybe salt?? should be a finer grit but still give you the crystalline particle effect effect. then just paint to color
i love it when a plan comes together
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
i saw a tute some time ago of an M60 tank ripping up mud and grass and it was quite dynamic.
The builder used acrylic cut to the wedge shape between the track and the ground, then spatterened his mud mix on that and worked out a bunch of globs of mud being flung backwards by allowing it to hang and dry updside down to get the flung shape. Also used brush brisltes IIRC to get some of the longer flung out blobs.
you may be able to adapt this idea for dust.
I like the cotton / spun nylon idea as well.
The builder used acrylic cut to the wedge shape between the track and the ground, then spatterened his mud mix on that and worked out a bunch of globs of mud being flung backwards by allowing it to hang and dry updside down to get the flung shape. Also used brush brisltes IIRC to get some of the longer flung out blobs.
you may be able to adapt this idea for dust.
I like the cotton / spun nylon idea as well.
- TazMan2000
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You will have a lot of difficulty, if you are expecting on having the effect of sand being suspended in mid air. Cotton will look like painted cotton. You will have better luck if you use the effect of after the action has been completed. i.e. sand being distributed from treads, tires in a sprayed pattern.
TazMan2000
TazMan2000
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The probelm with using anything even vaguely food-like for groundwork is that little critters will come & eat it. Sugar for sand, flour for snow, etc. are all bad ideas for this reason. On top of that, a lot of the food-type items will change colour over time with exposure to UV light, or heat or humidity, unless painted and paint will ruin the look.raser13 wrote:instead of sand couldn't you use brown sugar over the cotton??? or maybe salt?? should be a finer grit but still give you the crystalline particle effect effect. then just paint to color
Weevils, roaches & mites are not what you want crawling around your dioramas.
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
- Mr. Badwrench
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- raser13
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wouldn't the glue you use to hold it in place seal it away from the little buggies?? my grandfather has had a brown sugar beach on his train mock up for decades and hasn't mentioned any problems with bugs eating it. but he also sealed it with clear dull-coat to for good measure. and at the scale it looks amazingly like sand.
you might also be able to use the fine grit sand that they have in ash trays.
you might also be able to use the fine grit sand that they have in ash trays.
i love it when a plan comes together
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
Hi all
Thanks for all your tips which I put to good use.
Here is a link to some photos of the finished model and diorama which ended up winning 2nd place in the diorama section of the recent SSM "Starfighter 2" contest.
http://www.starshipmodeler.com/contest/dio_01.htm
In the end I used some polycotton (the stuff that you put in fish aquarium filters) coated with hairspray and sprinkled with real sand. I kept repeating the hairspray and sand until most of the polycotton fibres were obscured. I also rolled up a 1inch wide strip of clear plastic and inserted it underneath the cotton/sand mixture to give it some volume and lift the front part off the rest of the diorama.
I didn't manage to get the effect of a big volume of sand being kicked up, but overall it turned out well.
Cheers
hotrodnz
Thanks for all your tips which I put to good use.
Here is a link to some photos of the finished model and diorama which ended up winning 2nd place in the diorama section of the recent SSM "Starfighter 2" contest.
http://www.starshipmodeler.com/contest/dio_01.htm
In the end I used some polycotton (the stuff that you put in fish aquarium filters) coated with hairspray and sprinkled with real sand. I kept repeating the hairspray and sand until most of the polycotton fibres were obscured. I also rolled up a 1inch wide strip of clear plastic and inserted it underneath the cotton/sand mixture to give it some volume and lift the front part off the rest of the diorama.
I didn't manage to get the effect of a big volume of sand being kicked up, but overall it turned out well.
Cheers
hotrodnz