Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => Fantasy Adventures => Topic started by: Khurasan Miniatures on 12 January 2018, 05:48:01 PM
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We are pleased to release two new sets of dinosaurs for our 15mm prehistoric animals range -- Edmontosaurus juveniles and adults.
There are three poses of adults (and these were very large animals indeed) and two poses of juveniles -- a larger chick and a sub-adult. Juveniles were made to add variety, to require protection from the herd, and as an objective for predators.
This was the dinosaur once called "Trachodon" and later "Anatotitan," and well-known to kids as "duck-billed dinosaurs." They are depicted with the fleshy comb on top of their heads, as was suggested by a recent fossil find. Not everyone is certain the comb in the fossil is correct, and some gamers may prefer the more traditional look without it, so it's easy to snip it off with wire cutters and then file down.
Available now:
http://khurasanminiatures.tripod.com/15mm-prehistoric.html
Edmontosaurus herd
(http://khurasanminiatures.tripod.com/edmontosaurus-herd.jpg)
Edmontosaurus juveniles
(http://khurasanminiatures.tripod.com/edmontosaurus-juveniles.jpg)
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Fantastic sculpts and paint jobs! :-*
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Those are great, I have a soft spot for dinosaurs in this and 10mm scale! Might the adults be available in singles as well as a herd of 3? I intend to get a whole host of your beasties in the near future :)
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Will those hobgoblins be following anytime soon?
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Those are great, I have a soft spot for dinosaurs in this and 10mm scale! Might the adults be available in singles as well as a herd of 3? I intend to get a whole host of your beasties in the near future :)
Sorry, the dinosaurs are extremely light sellers — I make them more because I love them than because I’ll ever make my investment back. Making them available separately would mean two more moulds and that’s another $160 in the project.
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Perfectly understandable, I echo the Dino love and understand your reasonings. I do intend to order a bunch of stuff once my hobby mountain reduces somewhat anyway - thanks for posting these.