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Experience sharer : Cheap Diorama Making - pound stores and cheap options.


Jack109

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Dear All

 

I would like to share my experience and collect your suggestions on items that is possible to buy in pondshops in the UK (poundland, poundworld etc..) to make our dioramas ideas.

 

Diorama making its a beautiful thing and we can buy everything good quality and expensive, but I love to make beautiful things of small price when possible.

Below a list of what I have used to make my dioramas or aricraft display bases and I would like to hear if you used something else or have good and original/creative suggestions.

 

 

here my pics:

 

- Frames of different size and shapes : I settled for the round ones, just perfect for 1/72

- glue of different kind all good brands

- mini saw: I live in london on a budget on a shared flat so that is all I could afford but works well for my needs. yes you can buy   a bigger one for a fiver I know.

- wallpaper glue for snow. it needs to be skimmed, but hey its good.

- Filler for the base

- PVA glue

- hair spray for paint chipping (not really diorama related but hey!)

- I also built my static grass applicator from a racket bought at poundland and a tea skimmer from wilko (total expense 1.80 the cheapest static applicator on earth I believe)

- with the mesh of the racket i created barbed wire for my dioramas... it was amazing because very flexible, unfortunately its not a lot.

 

And on the free side, I love to use the lids of humus with filler for ww1 1/72 aircrafts, I color the outline of the base in black and apply grass on top. Just Perfect. for bigger planes I use plastic round lids from ice cream containers. They lack of depth for the base but hey thats super cheap and super quick and not too bad.

 

Do you have more suggestions?

 

 

please share your experience using pound shop products! or things we commonly see but no one thought about using!

Edited by Jack109
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Cotton wool balls, and cotton wool sheet, or pads. I've used cotton wool successfully for clumps of grass and for underwater plants.

 

For clumps of grass, dribble a blob of thick or medium CA onto your diorama, then press the cotton wool onto it, but not too hard. Let it fix, then pull the bulk of the cotton away. If a lot remains, pinch and pull more off until you have a reasonable amount to make the clump you require, then tease and pull at the remainder with something like a toothbrush to get the fibres to separate and stand up. Wetting the cotton wool at this point sometimes helps. When the clump is to your satisfaction give it a spray with acrylic varnish. I like to sprinkle Dil tops around my grass as well, so either dribble more CA around the area or use PVA, and sprinkle over the top.

 

For underwater plants, the same method can be used to fix the cotton to the bed. With a stream bed, brush the 'weed' in the direction of the flow of water before pouring your water resin.

 

On ‎22‎/‎08‎/‎2017 at 4:41 PM, Jack109 said:

wallpaper glue for snow. it needs to be skimmed, but hey its good.

HIJACK,

Wallpaper glue is a new one on me. Can you explain?

 

Rearguards,

Badder

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Cotton is a great idea, if you can please post a photo or link of the result I can better understand what I should do.

 

What about the color of the cotton? need to be colored in advance? how?

 

regarding wallpaper glue. I ve read that somewhere and tried.. basically wall paper glue its white and if dies not enter in contact with water stays white.

 

You can use a skimmer to keep only the thinner bunches

 

I ve used it one to give it a try... works as cheap option. see photo below.

 

ppp.jpg

 

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  • 1 month later...

Im up for cheep alternatives much more fun, not an experienced diorama builder but these are my cheep cheats. 

 

I have used polystyrene packing and builders finishing plasterer to make large rock formations in fact this base is all plaster covered polystyrene.

 

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/498773727466202256/

 

I have also used concrete mix a desert sand as well, just paint some PVA and sprinkle the concrete mix on top job done no paint required and its nice a fine.

 

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/498773727464140040/

 

Same method but I added some washes to this base.

 

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/498773727470119752/

 

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On ‎26‎/‎08‎/‎2017 at 1:38 PM, Jack109 said:

Cotton is a great idea, if you can please post a photo or link of the result I can better understand what I should do.

 

What about the color of the cotton? need to be colored in advance? how?

Sorry for the extremely long delay in answering, but I've recently used cotton wool to make waterweeds in my diorama WIP 'The ever evolving diorama' and I have photos now...  384710DSC09645.jpg

 

So basically, here's what I did...

First I decided where I wanted my waterweeds to go and how wide an area I wanted them to be 'rooted' in. Then I squeezed medium CA onto those patches and immediately pressed cotton wool balls onto them. Once the CA had set hard I gently pulled off lots of the cotton wool with my fingertips. The CA had by then soaked up into the wool so there's a fair bit of the wool that won't come off, plus the 'stronger' fibres. I then took a brush, dipped it in green weathering powder and then in water, and dabbed and brushed that into the cotton wool until it was all green. DON'T DO THIS WHILE THE CA IS STILL WET OR YOU WILL RUIN YOUR BRUSH! 

While the wool was still soaking wet I took a scalpel (or you can use a nail, toothpick, toothbrush etc) and began to comb, score, slice, at the fibres, ALWAYS IN A DOWNSTREAM DIRECTION, separating clumps of fibres, and making them line up 'with the flow'. Sometimes I'd cut big chunks out to make gaps between the 'streamers'. Usually the wool will dry out fairly quickly and I'd carry on with the scalpel until the wool dried... sometimes I'd re-wet it if I wasn't happy with the 'shape' of the weeds.

But once I was happy with everything I doused the weeds with thin CA. This makes them set stiff, pretty much as stiff as plastic. They then got a coat of gloss varnish, and, after drying, a wash with a dark green.

 

In the photos above, the last stages hadn't been done, and here they are still wet from the dousing with thin CA.

 

It doesn't matter about any gloss finish because it's going to be covered with resin water anyway.

 

 

For grass, I'd do exactly the same, except instead of teasing the cotton 'downstream' I'd tease it up into the air, and I'd separate the fibres much more before dousing with thin CA. As I said before, I'd dribble medium CA around the clump and sprinkle Dil Tops over it.

 

Hope that helps. For more photos, or information have a look at my current diorama WIP 'ever evolving diorama'. I think the cotton wool waterweeds are on page 34? Possibly earlier.

 

Rearguards,

Badder

 

 

Edited by Badder
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I find an awful lot of materials for dioramas at 'Fly Tips'. For those who aren't familiar with English phrases, fly Tips are illegal rubbish dumps... usually where builders, gardeners, painters and decorators dump their rubbish.

 

You can find:

Bricks... useful for breaking up to form rubble, brick dust, grit etc.

Sand and grit.... as above.

Carpets and mats... the fibres can be used to create clumps of grass/reeds/undergrowth.

Plastic tubing... for all kinds of construction work, thin diameters can be used for drainpipes, gutters, lampposts, etc

Electrical cables... the wires can be used for all kinds of things from twigs and branches on trees and bushes, barbed wire, aerials, grab handles on vehicles, if twisted together they can be used for tow cables.... etc etc.

Wood of all kinds....

 

I once found a square meter of Astroturf and I've been using that to make rushes alongside water features.

 

All of this stuff is free of course!

 

Rearguards,

Badder

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  • 2 weeks later...

Police Officer "So let me get this straight ,all this rubbish you have taken is for use in making dioramas ?"

Badder "Er ,yes officer "

Police Officer ,turning away and shaking head "Why Do They Always Come On To My Beat ?"

 

 

As always just joking .

I might give your idea about Bricks a go .

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On ‎07‎/‎11‎/‎2017 at 4:04 PM, cocky05d said:

Police Officer "So let me get this straight ,all this rubbish you have taken is for use in making dioramas ?"

Badder "Er ,yes officer "

Police Officer ,turning away and shaking head "Why Do They Always Come On To My Beat ?"

 

 

As always just joking .

I might give your idea about Bricks a go .

I perform a civic duty, tidying up and .... er... making good use of the things that I find, things that the everyday folk leave behind.

 

Badder

(The least well known Womble)

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  • 3 weeks later...

So I have see Pound land resin used as water on YT and I thought I would give it a go, so I bought my self some and set about filling a pond, when I mixed it I ended up with more bubbles than normal but I pored it and it didn't look to bad but after about 5 mins it turned very yellow. Not sure why but I have another tube so will try it again at some point.

 

Just thought I would share with you all here.

 

Some pictures for you.

 

37961090896_dac2e708f9_b.jpg

 

pre fill pond.

38124595111_a149e5f37d_b.jpg

 

Post filled pond after about 1 min.

26583175999_408425f12a_b.jpg

 and pond after about 5 mins

 

24486880638_44827406f3_b.jpg

 

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Interesting. I saw this diorama in the RFI and thought you'd painted the bottom of the pond light green and the margins much darker, before pouring your resin. I can see now I was wrong and you painted the whole bed of the pond grey. So it's the resin which has given the effect.

 

Still, the finished thing does look nice and shiny and smooth, not all bubbly like in the photo directly above. If you could post another photo of how it looks right now that'd be helpful to those who might then want to use the product.

 

IF the stuff had stayed 'bubbly' like in the last photo, it might have proven handy for ship modellers who want to make a frothy wake behind their ship.

 

Rearguards,

Badder

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30 minutes ago, Badder said:

IF the stuff had stayed 'bubbly' like in the last photo, it might have proven handy for ship modellers who want to make a frothy wake behind their ship.

Now that is a great idea! Going to use the other bottle of this on another display, it will be another robot but the frothy wake has sparked some ideas......:idea:

 

So here is the finished dump (it started as a pond but ended up a toxic dump due to the resin colour change) apart from the resin it has had some clear smoke and clear green hand brushed on top of the resin, there is still quite a few bubbles 

 

26857000099_9fc8945021_b.jpg

 

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Ahhhhh! Now I see what you've done Brian. And I take everything back. That's actually looking VERY TOXIC! Is it too late to drill up through the bottom of the base and insert a light source into the bottom of the pond? A diffuse light to make the pond glow, rather than have an obvious bright 'bulb' showing.

 

Rearguards,

Badder

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  • 1 month later...

Trees!

 

Fist attempt at wire trees, using left over stripped earth wire. For a first go its OK but I dont think I will do any more to this one, I will get some thinner wire before making any more. Once I have made a few more I will be covering them in plaster ( the stuff that goes on the wall in your house) because thats what I have to make bark before painting, this one is 5 cm tall.

 

Its a learning process. 

Its a very enjoyable and therapeutic exerciser thought. 

 

The two thing I learnt for this one,

1, make sure opposite branches are 180 degrees before you start twisting them together

2, twist more and then twist a bit more.

 

144641e06d45059f1cfa5c127108cc6e_l.jpg

 

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  • 1 year later...

I have only just started building dioramas, and to avoid wasting money on quality bases, I am experimenting with cork noticeboards - very cheap! B & M charge only £2.49 for a 60x40cm one, and WHSmiths do a frameless (but stiffer) 40x30 for a meagre £1.50! So frankly, even if my clumsy attempts are a disaster, at least it won't have cost much...anyone else tried the same? 

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On 06/05/2019 at 15:34, torqueofthedevil said:

I have only just started building dioramas, and to avoid wasting money on quality bases, I am experimenting with cork noticeboards - very cheap! B & M charge only £2.49 for a 60x40cm one, and WHSmiths do a frameless (but stiffer) 40x30 for a meagre £1.50! So frankly, even if my clumsy attempts are a disaster, at least it won't have cost much...anyone else tried the same? 

If your not too proud to do a bit of skip diving, foam insulation board is excellent, very easy to carve and completely free. It also allows more depth of surface in case you want hills/incline, holes, trenches etc. I recently did a small dio using insulation foam covered in soil from the garden (cooked to sterilise and then sieved) mixed with PVA - It dries rock hard. If you want cheap, I did this base for an out lay of £0.00:

 

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