Excellent presentation. I actually just got one of those electric sanders for the holiday, and it really is incredibly useful. It hits a perfect midway spot between the monotony of hand sanding versus the awkwardness of maneuvering a Dremel tool in tight corners.
Your channel always inspires me to keep building and painting. I just started the hobby (Warhammer 40k background 10 years ago) and your channel has been the best for creating these amazing statues. What I have completed thus far is Thanos Bust, Cpt America Bust Throwin Shield from Wicked and my next Project which I have been printing on two Phrozen Mighy 8k printers for 3 weeks now and still printing is the HulkBuster vs Hulk at the 1/6th scale (100%) size, it's huge and amazing so far I am 12k resin into printing still going. Lots to learn with such a big project, again your channel and content keeps me active with it!
I been painting minis for a while so I decided to do a wow character model. Its about 10 inches tall. I spent 3 weeks post processing the model. I spent an hour or two each night working on it. Needless to say this model I started a month ago just got a final prime coat a few days ago. I will never do this again unless I can find easier faster method. My fingers still hurt from post processing that model.
Awesome timing for this video. Just finished printing the hulk from wicked, now I feel much more confident about the final stages. Thank you for posting.
A great way of eliminating gaps is to go 3d so say those legs and thigh I would take that into zbrush and create new master files merging larger parts and removing seems then save that as a new stl. Making sure before hand it fits your printer
Man I really want that Gtool but it is out of stock everywhere locally and shipping is gonna be a long time to me. My thinking about taking one of my daughters old electric toothbrushes and rigging it up to do the same thing. Aye if it works it works right?
Where do you sand this stuff? I wear a mask while sanding, but I don't want to leave sand all over the stuff in the workroom since I know I'll spend a lot of time in there and uncured resin dust is probably a bad thing to inhale. How do you sand without getting the toxic dust all over your table/tools/chair and just all over your work area???
@@TheCreativeCollector is the designated work area enclosed some how? To prevent the dust from floating and landing on other surfaces and being inhaled later? I've resorted to sanding outdoors only, but that gets old fast and means I can't sand or prep at night. How did you designate the area for sanding and what do you use to contain all the dust it makes? I need to find something better than outdoors while still safe
great vid! thank you I just received my first 3d printer, I chose satunr S... I'm just not completely lost because of your videos... I still haven't taken it out of the box because I lack the courage to even test it... and delve into Slicer Lechee, I believe it's the best .. it will be? Thanks
Great content Henry. I’ve been using the G tool ever since you mentioned it in one of your earlier videos. Where have you found is a good source for replacement sanding discs for it?
@@TheCreativeCollector when you do use an airbrush, what primer paint are you using to put in it? I'm trying to learn a lot, been watching a ton of your videos(very helpful)