Lead Adventure Forum
Other Stuff => Workbench => Topic started by: Mako on 09 December 2017, 10:39:02 PM
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Just curious if anyone has ever done this, or is still doing this, given the limited number of poses for some figures?
Seems to me trying to bend, and/or actually conducting surgery on some, to generate new poses, wouldn't be too difficult.
Perhaps heating in boiling water, and/or using a heated blade, or rod might help with bending. Perhaps even using a hand-held hair dryer might work, though targeting a single area of the figure would seem to be difficult with this method. Holding over a candle (I can see major tears with this one, if you get it wrong)?
Surgery, pinning, and then using putty to fill in the gaps would appear to be a lot easier than with metal figs.
Perhaps toying with low-cost figs for a start would be the way to go, at first, until one gets a little experience.
Thoughts?
Photos?
Procedures?
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I have modified heroclix stuff but it is just to get a figure looking how I want it to look.
Below are my clix X-men. Nightcrawler was the biggest modification cutting the upper and lower halves from the original miniature and then gluing them together and sculpting a bit so the halves match using kneadatite (greenstuff). For cyclops I removed the beam effect and sculpted a new visor.
The easiest modification would be trying to reposition arms and changing the paint scheme. I'd probably cut and glue over trying to use heat. Over time a figure can go back to the original pose. But the figures are typically cheap so it is worth a shot to try.
(https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/482x69d7ujg1eyo/X-MenSS.jpg?dl=0)
Original Nightcrawler figure
(http://940ee6dce6677fa01d25-0f55c9129972ac85d6b1f4e703468e6b.r99.cf2.rackcdn.com/products/pictures/128819.jpg)
Original Cyclops figure
(http://940ee6dce6677fa01d25-0f55c9129972ac85d6b1f4e703468e6b.r99.cf2.rackcdn.com/products/pictures/1038338.jpg)
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I don't have any pictures but I've repositioned clix figures and swapped parts very easily with just a knife and superglue.
I find that heroclix are even more suited for this than many other figures because the kind of outfits they wear (unitards, gloves, straps, big shoulder pads etc) have such obvious lines or points of transition that it's easy to cut and reposition without having to do any sculpting or filling.
I agree about heat being most likely only a temporary modifcation. The PVC they're made of is so easy to cut and glue (use CA/Superglue) that it's not a way for me.
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I’ve Frankensteined many hero clip minis in my day. Good source of heads, hats and miscellaneous body parts for conversions. Well worth giving a try to practice on