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Pygmy Mammoth


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Greetings all!

 

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I recently picked up something a little different for a quick build - a Reaper Miniatures Pygmy Mammoth.

 

I think it may be part of some fantasy wargaming series... but I’m building it for my wife who teaches 4th grade to go along with a fossil mammoth molar and fur sample she shows the kids as part of their science unit.

 

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This is a departure from my usual plastic ships, airplanes, and tanks, and the material is a little different, too – some sort of slightly flexible polymer plastic. It comes partly assembled and is beautifully sculpted and well cast. Mold seams were fairly light and scraped away easily, and I attached the tusks and ears with cyanoacrylate. After blending the part joins with Milliput Standard Yellow-Grey two part epoxy putty, I have an assembled mammoth!

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The little mammoth looks cool with his dynamic head-high and three feet on the ground pose, but also makes the free-standing piece a little unstable. Attaching it to a base will help this.

 

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A prefinished oak wall plug plate from the local hardware store should serve nicely.

 

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I’ve used these before – they look good and make for quick, easy wood bases!

 

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To keep the mammoth from stepping through the plug holes, a simple “Earth” platform was trimmed from a piece of .060 inch plastic sheet. I penciled in the positions of the mammoth’s feet and rounded down the edges.

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I applied a coating of Golden Gel Mediums Coarse Pumice Gel to give the smooth plastic base some earth texture.

 

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Unfortunately, the groundwork ended up looking more like coarse beach sand than earth, so after it dried I added a slurry of spackling paste thinned with water over the top of it to de-emphasize the overlarge sand grains in the pumice gel.

 

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After it fully dries I’ll paint it and add some baking soda to create a snowy scene.

 

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I’ve had good luck with baking soda “snow” before, so a winter mammoth is a natural!

Edited by Tim Reynaga
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Before proceeding with the snow I came across Gamers Grass Yellow Flowers in the local hobby shop and thought a “Spring” effect might be fun instead.

 

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The flowers were attached to the base over a coat of Tamiya XF-52 Flat Earth acrylic.

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The mammoth was given a base coat of Tamiya XF-79 Linoleum Deck Brown lightened with Tamiya XF-55 Deck Tan with some XF-3 Flat Yellow and XF-7 Flat Red added to give the fur a nice orange hue (surviving mammoth fur samples are typically orange-ish in color). The tusks were painted with Tamiya XF-55 Deck Tan heavily lightened with Flat White.

 

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The mouth, eyes, and areas of skin such as the ears and underside of the trunk were painted with the base color with a little more red added.

 

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After painting the grey toes and black eyeballs, the mammoth was given a thin wash with Grumbacher Raw Umber and Windsor and Newton Burnt Sienna artist’s oils to deepen recesses and give the beast a slightly red-brown filter. Once this dried, a light drybrushing with the base color with a little more Deck Tan added was applied to integrate things and to provide some highlights.

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An overall coat of Tamiya Flat Clear TS-80 rattle-can spray knocked down the shine, and dabs of Future acrylic gloss were added to make the mouth look wet and give the eyes sparkle.

 

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Mounted to the base, Reaper Miniatures’ Pygmy Mammoth prepares to wow the 4th Graders of Dry Creek Elementary School as he stomps his way through Spring wildflowers!

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