Smallish update, trouble with numerous exams looming so close means I'm struggling to do much of anything and tutorials take ages to prepare.
Although not so much a tutorial, this is something worth bearing in mind as I've found it makes life much easier for sculpting over larger areas, hiding joins (fresh putty over hardened putty), more work time and even a reduction in stickiness.
Many of the above causing numerous headaches with that sculpting the Stegadon (mixing loads of putty and adding textures over such a large area is
VERY tricky, green stuff is not really suited or meant for large scale).
This is a direct post from my DA account, but it works with
BOTH pro-create and greenstuff (the later becoming a firm favourite), you can see below what I mean as this is a very early WIP stage for my primary hive ship in preparation for when BFG returns, you can see my thumb in the top right so that gives you a good indication of the amount of surface area I've already had to cover.
The trouble with puttys.
As I've said before, there is no perfect putty, different putties, consistencies for different situations, pro-create for example is good, BUT for my tastes, it's lacking a smidge, not as sticky as I'd like it to be, not as workable either for more organic shapes and textures. However I read this a few months ago from another mini sculptor, who in turn picked it up off Werner Klocke.
Fimo...

What you have here is some mixed up pro-create with a little bit of fimo soft, you mix the two together and BOOM! It's more pliable, workable, takes longer to dry and a tad stickier which is exactly what I need on occasion. This even works with green stuff too, in fact it means that even on a model where parts have completely dried, I can increase the amount of fimo (but it's important to not go beyond a 20% fimo to 80% green stuff/pro-create).
The benefit of this means I can smoothly hide gaps which before was a nightmare with green stuff (look at the more complete leg below, some of the green parts have a more yellowy quality, which has come from this mix).
This is also really handy when you're working on larger pieces, something that can make using green stuff difficult as getting the masses done correctly quickly becomes a pain.
As a final "I should be back soon" here's the banshee Wych I'm STILL doing, take note,
SORT YOUR ARMATURES OUT FIRST, SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO KEEP MAKING CHANGES.

