Powered by Blogger.
Labels
- 1:144 (12)
- Adventure (18)
- Bags (10)
- Clockwork Doll (8)
- Cooking (8)
- Costuming (10)
- crochet (5)
- Exploring Boulder (13)
- Fun Stuff (1)
- history (4)
- Holiday (2)
- Knupp Dollhouse (1)
- Miniatures (103)
- Movie Reviews (12)
- photo editing (3)
- School (3)
- Sewing (31)
- Sharing: News (3)
- Sharing: Places (2)
- Sharing: web sites (19)
- Site Updates (6)
- Special Projects (40)
- Steampunk (2)
- Tutorials (6)
- Verily I Rock (14)
- Wedding (3)
- Willowcrest (56)
- yarnwork (1)
My Animation Blog
January 31, 2020
After verifying that yes, my sofa pattern works, I set out to test paper. What would happen if I used something thinner? Something thicker? Something patterned? Something textured? At this scale, every tiny bit counts.
I went through my paper stash and picked three pieces of paper that I thought might look good as a sofa. It was easy to test, I simply held the page I had cut my test sofas from over the potential pages and looked through the holes left behind.
I looked at all the tiny print pages, but also the ones with big, busy prints. Sometimes, something can be so big that the little bits will work, too.
Things I discovered:
Papers with the same color core are also better, but with a narrow brush and a tiny bit of matching paint, the problem is easily solved. In fact, the brown one I painted is currently my favorite. This was one of the textured papers, and it ended up needing paint, because the colored texture had a tendency to scrape off in tiny bits. It has a white core, so it really needed the help. Fortunately the paper was quite sturdy and the paint didn't warp the paper.
I haven't yet attempted to print my own, but it seems perfectly reasonable to do so, if your printer can do the fine work on cardstock. Both the chair and sofa fit in a 1" x 2" block, so you don't need much!
Labels:
1:144,
Miniatures
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment