I'm building and painting my SF airborne brigade and although dropships are on the to do list, I also wanted some parachuted troops and equipment but saw no point in painting a number of figures that would last only one turn on the tabletop (whilst descending...).
So I went to work in Corel Draw, made a ractangle with rounded corners and a slightly smaller one to fit it the centre, typed a line of "-----" and placed this vertically in the rectangles, cutting and pasting it untill I had lines of stitches all over the "canvas". I then downloaded a woodland pattern from the net and placed it behind the (clear) rectangles: voila!
I printed the design twice on 80 gr paper and glued it back to back, making a sturdy enough canvas. I then slightly bended two floral wires (1mm thick) in the centre over a length equal to the canvas, glued the wires on the inside (on the black lines of the inner rectangle) and cut in at the corners, so I could fold the rim. A couple of more cuts in the rim made that look real enough to and I then twisted the wires into one lump at the bottom with two pairs of plyers.
I glued a piece of magnetic foil to a small metal base and a small length of plastic rod to the bottom (to fit over a GW flying base).
Since my figures all have washers underneath, they stick to the magnetic foil and the parachute is held in place on the back of the figure with a tiny elastic band (well, will be so, I have to go to the shop to buy some...). I tested it with a larger elastic and feel confident if a small enough one is used, it will look like just another belt on the figure. As soon as it is "landed" the chute and elastic are removed anyway... For taking the pic (paratrooper) the chute is just placed in balance (but won't stand handling... :?), but with the vehicle it is stuck between for and aft, so I don't need to attach it there...).
(http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm262/geudens_photos/parachute04.jpg)
(http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm262/geudens_photos/parachute03.jpg)
(http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm262/geudens_photos/parachute02.jpg)
(http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm262/geudens_photos/parachute01.jpg)
For a cost of next to nothing (the printouts being probably the most expensive part) I have now the possibility to really "drop" my troops! :D
Rudi