Hi MEGO customizers. I noticed that there's no posts about Instamorph, so I wanted to bring it to your attention.
I recently bought a bag, and spent some time with it.
I was browsing THE FWOOSH and I noticed that the forum had updates on Boss Fight Studios' "Vitruvian HACKS" (Greek mythology figures). The site led me to a link at Hisstank with photos of the prototypes.
http://news.hisstank.com/2015/08/03/...t-studio-56039
I decided that wanted to make some Spartan spears for some skeletons, in their size. I didn't like the bend in plastic spears, so mine are made from wood, with real leather wrapped around it. For the spear heads, I used InstaMorph.
You dunk the stuff in hot water and pull it out and mold it with your hands. It hardens after 2-3 minutes at room temperature. If you still need to work on it some more, dunk it in hot water again.
The stuff doesn't hold detail as well as Sculpey, but it has a HUGE advantage over wood, styrene, ABS plastic, putty, Sculpey, etc... it's almost unbreakable. The fragile part of a spear head where the spear head meets the socket is actually very strong and isn't going to snap off. The sockets can be made hollow to slip over the wooden spear shafts (like real life). Bows can be made completely functional, and can shoot arrows a few feet. There is a slight flex to Instamorph, which can be tapped as an advantage.

These aren't MEGO-sized skeletons. They're smaller, but you get the idea:


To dye the stuff, I used chalk pastels. Basically, I shave off some powder from a chalk pastel stick and knead it into the plastic while it's warm. The color possibilities are endless, since a huge set of chalk pastels (36 colors) can be bought at Michael's for $4.99. Since the colors become part of the plastic, there is no paint rubbing off. The colors are permanent.
It gets better... Instamorph BINDS TO PVC! So, whatever soft PVC heads you have... you can add hair, moustaches, beards, horns, etc. and the stuff will bind itself to the heads, or hands or boots, etc. It could possibly be used to repair body and joint cracks.It doesn't stick to all types of plastic, so you'd need to experiment and find out what it does/does not bind to.
In the hands of skilled sculptor, an endless array of plastic action figure accessories can be made.
I recently bought a bag, and spent some time with it.
I was browsing THE FWOOSH and I noticed that the forum had updates on Boss Fight Studios' "Vitruvian HACKS" (Greek mythology figures). The site led me to a link at Hisstank with photos of the prototypes.
http://news.hisstank.com/2015/08/03/...t-studio-56039
I decided that wanted to make some Spartan spears for some skeletons, in their size. I didn't like the bend in plastic spears, so mine are made from wood, with real leather wrapped around it. For the spear heads, I used InstaMorph.
You dunk the stuff in hot water and pull it out and mold it with your hands. It hardens after 2-3 minutes at room temperature. If you still need to work on it some more, dunk it in hot water again.
The stuff doesn't hold detail as well as Sculpey, but it has a HUGE advantage over wood, styrene, ABS plastic, putty, Sculpey, etc... it's almost unbreakable. The fragile part of a spear head where the spear head meets the socket is actually very strong and isn't going to snap off. The sockets can be made hollow to slip over the wooden spear shafts (like real life). Bows can be made completely functional, and can shoot arrows a few feet. There is a slight flex to Instamorph, which can be tapped as an advantage.

These aren't MEGO-sized skeletons. They're smaller, but you get the idea:


To dye the stuff, I used chalk pastels. Basically, I shave off some powder from a chalk pastel stick and knead it into the plastic while it's warm. The color possibilities are endless, since a huge set of chalk pastels (36 colors) can be bought at Michael's for $4.99. Since the colors become part of the plastic, there is no paint rubbing off. The colors are permanent.
It gets better... Instamorph BINDS TO PVC! So, whatever soft PVC heads you have... you can add hair, moustaches, beards, horns, etc. and the stuff will bind itself to the heads, or hands or boots, etc. It could possibly be used to repair body and joint cracks.It doesn't stick to all types of plastic, so you'd need to experiment and find out what it does/does not bind to.
In the hands of skilled sculptor, an endless array of plastic action figure accessories can be made.
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