Really digging that 90’s vibe. Great job!
Really digging that 90’s vibe. Great job!
It should have been a flying whale.
I can only assume they started it before work.
As a boss, I would demand some “as proof”.
Far better than my first go.
Great work on the hood/cloak!
My wife’s cat* hated me and I didn’t see her for 9 months. She was an indoor cat.
*(We got two rescue cats the day after we moved into our house. It’s not like I butted into a long relationship.)
Oh, some of them need laughed or yelled at, for certain.
I, however, need continued employment.
Poker face.
No matter what I am thinking internally, it does not show externally. Essential skill for customer service.
A Toyota embedded, like a javelin, 6 feet off the ground in the side of an abandoned building.
They made the first 90° turn of a dog-leg, but missed the second and, with the help of a ditch, launched into the air at the building.
You had me at House Davion, but the model looks amazing.
I find his short stories better than his novels.
“Night Shift” is my favorite of those collections.
So… interfering in an interference case.
I see the raccoon and all I think is this.
Totally agree.
As a temporary measure, I have blocked that bot from my feed.
He still owes me money.
Unused characters become my NPCs.
If you’re using plastic glue (which melts/welds plastic together), you need bare plastic for it to work right.
Cyanoacrylate glue (superglue) doesn’t need bare plastic, but there’s always the risk of the paint coming off at the connection, breaking the join.
If you are using non-contrast paints, I find it easiest to not fully assemble the minis before painting. Paint the arms and shoulders separate so that it is easier to hit all that “chaos trim”.
Make sure to leave your glue points unpainted. I use poster tac to cover those (and it makes a good handle when you stick in a toothpick).
Back in my IT support days, IPX routing had a “Count to Infinity” problem when the number of hops between sites went above 15. We used to joke that this made 16 “Infinity”.
Being nerds at the time, we did napkin math to prove the Shakespearian Monkey Quotient was 256cmy (combined monkey years) for “Hamlet”.