How to Make Cardstock Miniatures for Dungeons & Dragons, Poorhammer

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • How to make cardstock miniatures for your tabletop roleplaying games.
    Supplies and Tools: www.amazon.com/shop/wylochscr...
    Chipboard: amzn.to/2EW2f2u
    (UK): amzn.to/2AWCMUS
    ** Disclaimer: If you use these links, I receive a small commission from Amazon. It does not impact your purchasing experience in any way whatsoever.
    D&D 5e Modules: www.etsy.com/shop/WylochsArmory
    Patreon: / wylochsarmory
    My Facebook Page: / wylochsarmory
    Join the Tabletop Crafters Guild: / dmscottyscraftsngames
    Sponsor: www.heroshoard.com/
    The home of TrueTiles and other excellent 3D-printable models.
    ---
    IF YOU ARE GOING TO ASK ME WHAT THE GAUGE SHOULD BE FOR LARGER CREATURES: The answer is I don't have a standard because Large (and larger) creatures aren't nearly as standard as humanoids. A young dragon, an ogre, and a gelatinous cube all have vastly different heights so a Gauge isn't helpful. Rather, just paste it next to a completed human fighter that you've done, and scale until it "looks right" next to that fighter.
  • Hry

Komentáře • 610

  • @edheldude
    @edheldude Před 9 lety +465

    I had an idea:
    12:05 Since you are gluing your minis to the bases, you could print two wings for your dragon and attach them to its back at an angle. It'd look more 3d that way. You could do similar things to tails and tentacles. Cut them off and re-attach them at an angle.

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 9 lety +116

      Would give this 100 likes if I could.

    • @allluckyseven
      @allluckyseven Před 9 lety +21

      +Wyloch's Crafting Vids It deserves a video, doesn't it?

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 9 lety +51

      +allluckyseven You know what....yep, added to the To-Do list.

    • @MrSucidar
      @MrSucidar Před 9 lety +5

      +Wyloch's Crafting Vids Please do that video

    • @jarronams8877
      @jarronams8877 Před 8 lety +3

      +Wyloch's Crafting Vids Any update on this addition? I believe we are all eagerly awaiting this one

  • @onespecialddnerd5933
    @onespecialddnerd5933 Před 6 lety +166

    For the people looking for the measurements:
    Gauge .25in wide 1.375in high
    Tab 1in wide .125in high
    Base Layer 8in wide 11in high

    • @cosmoreverb3977
      @cosmoreverb3977 Před 5 lety

      @Hazeofflames check out the description for that. As far as tabs, 2in should do the trick, but eyeballing it usually gets as good as a result.

    • @manimprettyhorny7291
      @manimprettyhorny7291 Před 4 lety

      This is the measurements for Human sized minis right?

    • @frankreynolds2905
      @frankreynolds2905 Před 4 lety

      @@manimprettyhorny7291 Based on what I saw in the video, since he used an Orc as the example, I'd say yea, human sized.

  • @Jotunn96
    @Jotunn96 Před 4 lety +56

    I know I'm late but as a completely new dm trying to set up a campaign for a party of new players this is not only really damn cost efficient but they look great. Thanks for this because I wouldn't have thought of this on my own.

  • @drVarulv
    @drVarulv Před 6 lety +60

    This isn't even a photoshop tutorial and yet I've learned more about how to use photoshop than any tutorial has taught me before, thanks! Also, this is going to be a huge boost for my game

  • @jokesontojo
    @jokesontojo Před 4 lety +29

    Really needed this, I tried buying minis and I ended up having them stolen from me. Heartbroken from not only spending a lot of money on them but how someone would simply steal them from me.

    • @rogueftw.
      @rogueftw. Před měsícem

      Same. I'm starting DND cuz im bored, but i have got SO MANY stolen hotwheels. Can relate.

  • @adamfox1669
    @adamfox1669 Před 3 lety +6

    Wow. As a wargamer for many moons, this has got to be the BEST card stock army I've come across. Great tutorial. Excellent work and final results are brilliant. Thanks so much for sharing

  • @keanewa7847
    @keanewa7847 Před rokem +5

    For anybody struggling to do the border with gimp, this is the easiest way I've found:
    1. Get your mini properly scaled, transparent, colour adjusted, etc.
    2. Copy and paste that layer so you've got an exact copy in the same position
    3. Right click on that new layer and click "alpha to selection" to select everything that isn't transparent on that layer
    4. While it is all selected, go to the Select menu at the top, click Grow, and grow selection by 10px
    5. Click your fill tool, then hold shift and click inside your new selection to fill it all
    6. Make sure your layers are in the right order so your original image is on top of your new solid background and merge them together

    • @Thomas-np3gi
      @Thomas-np3gi Před 9 měsíci

      I'm stuck between steps 3 & 4. I've clicked "alpha to selection" but nothing happens and I don't see the word "grow" anywhere as an option. I've also tried simply scaling it 10% bigger and using the fill bucket but it just fills the whole rectangle rather than the orc.

    • @keanewa7847
      @keanewa7847 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Thomas-np3gi "Alpha to selection" should select everything on the layer that isn't transparent. Then you can either right click your image and go to "Select" in that dropdown, or through the Select menu at the top and hopefully Grow will be in there. Sorry, it did not cross my mind at the time that Select is pretty ambiguous there

    • @Thomas-np3gi
      @Thomas-np3gi Před 9 měsíci

      @@keanewa7847 Ahhhh thank you for the clarification, found it and it works!

  • @lordgonzo6611
    @lordgonzo6611 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Low maintenance and quality design. Love it.

  • @SiliconSicilian
    @SiliconSicilian Před 3 lety +4

    Nice. In Canada, washers are now cheaper than pennies so it is good to see that the hot glue bead method works.

  • @danielpierce922
    @danielpierce922 Před 7 lety +40

    Awesome! I love the Idea of color coding the players too.

  • @DrFizzyQuizzler
    @DrFizzyQuizzler Před rokem +2

    This is incredible! I run 3 dnd games and I’ve been getting into warhammer with some friends. This method will save me a ton of money as none of us really have the funds for a ton of minis. Thank you!

  • @adamstark7444
    @adamstark7444 Před 7 lety +34

    This. Is. GENIUS. Thanks for making this.

  • @CrapE_DM
    @CrapE_DM Před 2 lety

    Still my favorite method I've seen. The dark outline makes the colors pop and look so professional.

  • @TheSamba37
    @TheSamba37 Před 3 lety

    I've watched many of your videos and I still think this one is the most useful. Time spent, minimal. Cost, low. Immersion at the table, more than adequate. Reusability, immense. I have a 3d printer and I still find myself doing this over printing many of the mobs for my games.
    Thank you.

  • @907CoolBoy
    @907CoolBoy Před 7 lety +1

    Dude, this is awesome! Way more fun and affordable than buying minis. I was blown away by all of the ground decorations you made. Very well done! :D

  • @xamanoth
    @xamanoth Před 9 lety +2

    Thank you for this great tutorial! I'm glad you posted it sooner than episode 10 or 11 :)

  • @MrJargonite
    @MrJargonite Před 9 lety +6

    Excellent tutorial, this will really help me out a ton, especially the bit with photoshop and using high res images to make your own template. I had already been using foamcore as a base like you did, but I never thought about just gluing it to the washer. I think I should also mention that there are various companies that create printable sheets of minis that feature both front and back views of a creature, so you know which way it is facing. I happen to use a lot of the free stuff from Onemonk miniatures, as it IS free, though you have to rescale some of it before printing. I hope to see more videos from you in the future.

  • @Iambiguous
    @Iambiguous Před 7 lety

    Spectacular! This just opened up a whole new way to produce minis for me. Thank you.

  • @allluckyseven
    @allluckyseven Před 9 lety +24

    Alternatively, if you need to use facing rules on your game, you could desaturate one of the sides of the figure to represent its back side.
    OR... Instead of using illustrations, you could try and find photos of miniatures, both front and back. It's a bit hard to find high resolution ones, though. But I don't think it matters that much.

  • @MiniTerrainDomain
    @MiniTerrainDomain Před 9 lety +1

    So very cool and concise! I need some wolves and other minis for which this perfect. Thanks for sharing!

  • @GrimdimGames
    @GrimdimGames Před 5 lety +4

    After all this time I still forgotten to like the video that helped me with so many of my campaigns, thank you

  • @oceanygames6291
    @oceanygames6291 Před 7 lety +6

    Cool, this is defiantly in my opinion the best way to make a mini

  • @violethyena6895
    @violethyena6895 Před 5 lety +1

    They're gorgeous! thank you for sharing!

  • @RodSalm
    @RodSalm Před 5 lety +2

    Wow. Good idea, well executed. Dude, you put so much effort into your games. Making us other DM's look bad.

  • @BuggSmasher
    @BuggSmasher Před 5 lety +2

    This is just brilliant! Fantastic video providing a cost saving idea, while the crafting side is a fun buy inn to share with the family as well. D&d / Basic Fantasy is approved in our house. Thank you!

  • @sim2570
    @sim2570 Před 9 lety +1

    Cool! You could use that technic for fourniture, doors all of orther stuff you need. Thanks for sharing!

  • @cociascarlet4152
    @cociascarlet4152 Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much! I know you made this a few years ago but this will be a great to make into set of stocking stuffers for my boys who are just getting into D&D!

  • @McSuilenroc
    @McSuilenroc Před 7 lety

    Looks gorgeous! I'm gonna do it in a few days hopefully!

  • @ValosarX
    @ValosarX Před 6 lety

    This video has served me well and also been a gate way drug into creating more things. I've used the knowledge you imparted in this video to design my own Pathfinder item cards from scratch front and back. I've printed them with this method and glued them to normal playing cards with great success. They are designed so vital details like name weight and value are at the top so you can stack them ontop each other and create an on the fly item list to quickly figure up your weight and the value of your inventory while being able to pick out the cards and read roles specific to the item

  • @RaymondThePainter
    @RaymondThePainter Před 5 lety

    This actually looks really really cool! I'm going to try this!

  • @deadman-3964
    @deadman-3964 Před 7 lety

    I want to thank you so much for this tutorial Wylock, these minis came out awesome and save so much money! Much thanks!

  • @dracoinfinite9594
    @dracoinfinite9594 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much this helped out immensely, you made a great video! Congratulations on making such a well crafted instruction video!

  • @LightBulbPlayz
    @LightBulbPlayz Před 7 lety

    Super Awesome. I just found you through facebook and Im definitely going to be making use of this method. Thank you so much.

  • @joshuabrett
    @joshuabrett Před 4 lety

    Thank you! You're awesome! Keep up the good work. Definitely going to be watching all your similar vids.

  • @georgemayhew8513
    @georgemayhew8513 Před 4 lety +1

    You are a true wizard; will definitelt be implementing this in my games :)

  • @sleepyyghostt
    @sleepyyghostt Před 6 lety +1

    oh!! those are really cool!! definitely gonna try making these

  • @JustQuixa
    @JustQuixa Před 6 lety +2

    Late to the mini party, but still wanted to offer a belated thank you! Your video was very helpful (especially since our group is just starting out!) It will be fun to see something other than dice for enemies.

  • @brokenterrain
    @brokenterrain Před 4 lety

    This is one of the videos that got me started. I went crazy nuts with these. Have close to 200 with more to make. Love your videos Wyloch.

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks very much!

    • @Thomas-np3gi
      @Thomas-np3gi Před 9 měsíci

      Any chance you still have the files? I'm trying to learn gimp while doing this and I'm incredibly clumsy...

  • @coldwind
    @coldwind Před 6 lety

    Excellent video. Adding decor/texturing/color to the base is a great idea.

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 6 lety

      Thx, be sure and watch my two follow ups (040 and 053 I think)

  • @jchunick
    @jchunick Před 8 lety

    Not to seem like I'm just coming on here to harp, I actually enjoy your clear and concise tutorials, and have watched the majority of your videos, they are a very nice compliment to DM Scotty's stuff.

  • @TheKazragore
    @TheKazragore Před 7 lety +6

    00:00 "If you have ale, then you have a friend in Grog Strongjaw"
    Great video! Such a simple process. The only problem I have is that I'm so flat out for content prep that I'll never have the time to actually make minatures for my players. I'm currently planning on using Lego for that.

    • @zeroken9743
      @zeroken9743 Před 2 lety

      I was wondering where I recognized the music from.

  • @dustingonzales2566
    @dustingonzales2566 Před 8 lety +1

    This tutorial is amazing. Great to see a well explained step by step all the way through the process.
    As a suggestion. I saw an awesome video somewhere that does it similarly. But instead of gluing them to bases you can use binder clips (with the silver bits removed) to hold them up. That way you can store the printouts in stacks or in clear plastic sleeves in a binder. Makes storage easier.
    Also for those people that have them. Pathfinder pawn stands work great for these as well, just glue the printouts onto chipboard instead of card stock. I keep the white halo around them though, so that they are easier to cut, and so that they match the other pathfinder pawns.

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 8 lety +1

      Thanks!

    • @dustingonzales2566
      @dustingonzales2566 Před 8 lety

      +Dustin Gonzales Forgot to mention. If you want to use the pathfinder stands... In the stage where you mirror the figure, instead of adding a 1 pixel line, add another bar, (the same thickness of your chipboard), that way you can fold it over the top in the same manner as the tutorial.

  • @zachgiardini7766
    @zachgiardini7766 Před 7 lety +17

    This guide was fantastic! I don't have photoshop but I downloaded GIMP for free, did the same thing but the shortcuts weren't valid. This is going to be a fantastic tool for me moving forward, thanks for making this.

    • @randyd9090
      @randyd9090 Před 7 lety +1

      what is the process with gimp, i also have gimpshop.....not sure how to do it without being able to follow along

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 7 lety +1

      You will need to google the equivalent shortcuts to the narration. Sorry, the answer to the question is basically another five minute video. On my list, but not high priority right now.

    • @overkill4980
      @overkill4980 Před 7 lety

      Plz wyloch can you give me a template with already made paper minis

    • @zachgiardini7766
      @zachgiardini7766 Před 7 lety +1

      Hey Wyloch thanks again for this guide. I've now made about 25 of these, and I'm wondering... How do you move them around? They look great but don't stand up to be jostled around in a box, the glue seems to separate and then I have to re-glue them to the base. Do you put them in some kind of rack or frame?

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 7 lety +2

      Hmmm, no just toss em in a box, never had any issues with either base method. Ensure you act very quickly when using hot glue, as in two seconds from drawing the bead to attaching. Also see episodes 040 and 053 for more basing ideas.

  • @thomasboynton1
    @thomasboynton1 Před 8 lety

    Totally works a charm! I found packs of 3/4" thick black plastic tap washers, 3 for 75p, topped with budgie sand and fish tank pebbles, makes awesome cheap figures! Thanks so much for the tutorial!

  • @johnnywhite1681
    @johnnywhite1681 Před 4 lety

    Fantastic instructions and video example. Thank you!

  • @MrMorlaf
    @MrMorlaf Před 4 lety

    this is VERY professional. The same method can be applied to a much shoddier but equally effective outcome at 1/100 the time. You can even make blank ones to write on them whatever you need on the fly....

  • @haladkins1197
    @haladkins1197 Před 7 lety

    I have zero experience with Photoshop. I watched this video about a dozen times and baby stepped through the process hand in hand with this video. It was fun, it worked great and it was an awesome intro for me to Photoshop, thanks!!

    • @WylochsArmory
      @WylochsArmory  Před 7 lety

      Good for you! Once you get in a rhythm it becomes second nature really quickly.

  • @timhayes3787
    @timhayes3787 Před 6 lety

    This video helped me so much, I was trying to find out a way to play dnd cheaper and you gave me that option, thank you

  • @iamdevman
    @iamdevman Před 8 lety +1

    As someone who does a lot of 2d digital work, this is an awesome way for me to really add a personal touch to the miniature aspect of table top gaming.

  • @Postmann88
    @Postmann88 Před 7 lety

    man, I wasn't going to do this, but it looks like so much fun!

  • @yakapoe
    @yakapoe Před 5 lety

    Oh boy, this video has got me thinking. I’ll have to make some and think of my some improvements with my engineering experience.

  • @DennisCNolasco
    @DennisCNolasco Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the tutorial Wyloch!

  • @FloTingStiCkonWatEr
    @FloTingStiCkonWatEr Před 7 lety

    Such a neat idea, i am just now starting to DM alot of games and wanted to upgrade my player's experiance with mini's. This is 100% affortible for me and looks absolutely great.

  • @MrHomelessHobos
    @MrHomelessHobos Před 7 lety

    Hey man, your videos are real helpful. Keep up the good work

  • @sisnerosreunion5399
    @sisnerosreunion5399 Před 4 lety

    Love your video, can’t wait to try it myself

  • @Briansgate
    @Briansgate Před 7 lety

    Ok,I just found your channel, and this is awesome!

  • @joshuaehl1481
    @joshuaehl1481 Před 5 lety +2

    This is brilliant!! Perfect.

  • @tubeisace
    @tubeisace Před 5 lety

    This is very cool. I have been looking for miniatures for Rangers of The Shadowdeep. I think I'll give this a try! Thanks.

  • @timelessadventurer
    @timelessadventurer Před 2 lety

    This is awesome!!! Great job!

  • @jarethduke9291
    @jarethduke9291 Před 2 lety

    these really look awesome!

  • @tomtichy3655
    @tomtichy3655 Před 5 lety

    Wyloch, I really enjoyed your tutorial. The use of washers and the clear packing tape are awesome. I have enjoyed watching your videos, because you find creative ways to make things that you might have to pay an arm and a leg for else where. Plus nothing beats using something that you have created. I am right now working on building several 40k armies with a similar process, mainly because my brother and I play over Skype and sometimes the units that I would like to use I can't, because I have to use them to proxy what he is using.

  • @ScienceProject99
    @ScienceProject99 Před 3 lety

    These are really stylish, I want to use this for non dnd crafts like just propping character art up and what not.

  • @Halloweenville
    @Halloweenville Před 9 lety +1

    Very Cool Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @MattMillerMacLeod
    @MattMillerMacLeod Před 9 měsíci

    This is amazing, I'm inspired.

  • @thenovicedm7966
    @thenovicedm7966 Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you very much for this video. I'm terrible with painting minis (lazy too) and don't like the expense involved.

  • @chrisriordian
    @chrisriordian Před 8 lety

    very nice ideas. good job

  • @OverlordShanbo
    @OverlordShanbo Před 8 lety

    Great video dude! I'm a budding DnD player and I'm definitely gonna make some of these for me and my group's first outing!

  • @thomasboynton1
    @thomasboynton1 Před 8 lety +5

    Looks brilliant, managed to follow the tutorial and get the same results with GIMP :) (off to print me off an orc troop)

    • @thomasboynton1
      @thomasboynton1 Před 3 lety

      @@teamdoubleR sorry buddy it's been 5 years since I did this I cannot remember what I did! Wish you best of luck.

  • @cberg2731
    @cberg2731 Před 4 lety +1

    You could also print them on Card stock and use wooden 1 inch squares or Circles. You can buy them in bulk on Amazon. Great tutorial by the way.

  • @nebadonbr
    @nebadonbr Před 8 lety

    Nice work , thank you for sharing.

  • @jackeilhigh
    @jackeilhigh Před rokem

    Amazing work

  • @thenovicedm7966
    @thenovicedm7966 Před 7 lety

    Solid video. I'm surprised I haven't seen this content online before. Guess it's the tree in the forest (for me). Now I've got to learn how to use my computer and printer ?! The craft part is the easy part for me. LOL ! Really like the color coding and simple base construction. Thank you.

  • @0Ninja0Dude0
    @0Ninja0Dude0 Před 7 lety +3

    very nice! I was trying to figure out how I could make matching paper pawns that'd match my pathfinder pawns. it's hard finding resources for near future settings

  • @kgp4death
    @kgp4death Před 7 lety +92

    If someone has a link to a document with a whole bunch of card stock mini's that would be very helpful.

  • @codyguindon2090
    @codyguindon2090 Před 8 lety

    love these vids. trying these out now

  • @KarasSteiger
    @KarasSteiger Před 7 lety

    This video was very helpful, thanks! I will apply some of these for my ICRPG paper minis :)

  • @Commandasaurus
    @Commandasaurus Před 7 lety

    AMAZING! Great Job!

  • @paulaneary7877
    @paulaneary7877 Před 2 lety

    Gorgeous!

  • @markh6428
    @markh6428 Před 8 lety +1

    First of all, very nice Vid, thanks for that!
    A tip how i do the shadows (probably easier?) if you do not need to fill up more black afterwards: Right click on the layer of the figure -> Filling properties -> Contour -> Make it 10px wide an black -> finished.
    (Don't know if the menus are 100% correct, just translated it straight from my german version)

  • @jasonfrederick6564
    @jasonfrederick6564 Před 2 lety

    awesome work

  • @silviofoj
    @silviofoj Před 8 lety +6

    Wow, that dragon is amazing!
    Great tip, great ideia!

  • @MattisLegend
    @MattisLegend Před 7 lety +3

    dude. this is awesome

  • @simmonslucas
    @simmonslucas Před 8 lety +1

    this is so simple, genius!

  • @A_A_Ron_Burgundy
    @A_A_Ron_Burgundy Před rokem

    Amazing! Thank you!

  • @edheldude
    @edheldude Před 9 lety +6

    Great stuff. Exactly what I've been doing but I don't glue my miniatures to bases since it makes storing them harder. I just use printable paper bases.

    • @mikesteadham2919
      @mikesteadham2919 Před 8 lety

      what kind of bases do you use?

    • @edheldude
      @edheldude Před 8 lety +1

      Ones you can print. Like these onemonk.com/bases
      There are other styles and ways to base them but those work for me.

    • @MelancolicAlcoholic
      @MelancolicAlcoholic Před 5 lety

      Binder clips work great for me

  • @stephenrenwick8781
    @stephenrenwick8781 Před 6 lety +1

    Looking good 👍👍👍

  • @TheTomar33
    @TheTomar33 Před rokem +1

    Thanks, great idea.

  • @PyroRogue
    @PyroRogue Před 7 lety +1

    Fantastic tutorial! =D

  • @DocHollidayGames
    @DocHollidayGames Před 7 lety +8

    These look great! I've noticed that Paizo is selling Pathfinder printable paper minis, but they look so cartoony, so this is a much better way to do it! By the way, I'm not sure if it works this was in Photoshop (can't really afford Photoshop right now), but in Gimp you can just create a new layer with the defined sizes and filled with color in one step.

    • @williamcox955
      @williamcox955 Před 7 lety +2

      Joseph Holliday how do you do that in gimp? I've just started using it and I'd like to know how

    • @DocHollidayGames
      @DocHollidayGames Před 7 lety +2

      William Cox When you go to "add layer", the height, width, and fill type are in the dialogue box.

  • @linoumajorzerojdrs7479

    This is soooooo coool ! Thanks for the tip =)

  • @mimirudoll6705
    @mimirudoll6705 Před 4 lety +2

    I love this tutorial! Its perfect! 😁👌 However I might just have to draw my own characters because my friends prefer my designs for their characters. I will be printing the dragons and beasts though. 😁👍

  • @Ellehsdee
    @Ellehsdee Před 4 lety

    You're awesome! Thanks for the tutorial!

  • @MeGaShaHeS
    @MeGaShaHeS Před 7 lety

    These are great man.

  • @OverratedJobber
    @OverratedJobber Před 8 lety

    These are so cool!

  • @jonboyjagger
    @jonboyjagger Před 6 lety +1

    So I just thought of this while looking around for things to use for D&D crafting, i was trying to figure out how I was going to make paper minis without a printer, then I turn and see my entire collection of Magic The Gathering cards. Boxes upon boxes of commons and uncommon worth literally pennies, I start going through and wuickly find quite a few that have full beautiful artwork of cool creatures, I just grab my exact blade, cut out the monster from the image, then cut a square from the remaining text box and glue it to that as a base! Its not all that flashy, but it works and all you need is a magic card with a nice image, glue, and a knife! So far they look really good other than the card back, but it will do in a pinch and you can spend like $10 to get 1,000+ throw away cards at a game store. Might be worth looking into :)

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 Před 4 lety

      You should start collecting creature tokens... those are worthless... Lol.

  • @shaydeexul4062
    @shaydeexul4062 Před 6 lety

  • @SteveParkin
    @SteveParkin Před 8 lety +3

    as someone looking to start DM play and needing a bunch of minis, these are inspiring. lovely, too.

  • @skeeve55
    @skeeve55 Před 6 lety

    very impressive and clever!

  • @alexriskbreaker7209
    @alexriskbreaker7209 Před 5 lety

    Hi there and thanks for sharing your passion with us. I couldn't match your skill and dedication but I would like to contribute with some details I personally like about paper minis. It is of course my opinion and not mandatory by any extend: First I think that a white background brightens up the figure, so the black line should be still be there for contrast purposes but very thin, over a white aura background. This suits better at least, or even if, you are portraying a full white figure such as Yeti or classic ghost. The base of figures should be always dark or directly black. Its work should not be to drag attention from the figure above it, keeping in mind exceptions such as the mentioned in-game item and such especial cases. Its shape round or elliptical and not too thick above "ground". Keeping a rectangular frame with somehow rounded superior corners around your figure instead of trimming around the figures' details make also excellent minis as long as all of them look similar. This makes the figure actually look better when you're not looking the figure directly in front of it. A paper figure melting too much with the rest of the diorama isn't actually a great achievement, since they are the story characters. Thank you.

  • @LibraGamesUnlimited
    @LibraGamesUnlimited Před 7 lety +1

    When it started and he was drinking from that big glasses I half expected him to do an Archer and hold his finger up signaling us to wait while he drank some more. :)