Duskryn & PrintForge
You ever crawl into the forgotten guts of an old warehouse and stumble on a hidden room that feels like a secret command post? I think those spots could give us a lot of inspiration for miniature tactics and terrain.
Yeah, I've trekked through the back of an abandoned warehouse once and found a cramped room that felt like a war room from a lost age. The concrete walls and rusted steel gave me a good blueprint for a ruined outpost, but the fold on that doorway was tactically useless—just like that cloak you tried to paint last time. If you’re going to use it as a basis for miniature terrain, clean up the seams first and then let the detail breathe. Remember, a good battle scene starts with a strong, realistic foundation—no flimsy folds.
Sounds like a solid plan—just strip the rough edges, keep the walls tight, then layer in that grit. The foundation’s what keeps the whole thing from collapsing into a mess. Let's keep the folds functional, not decorative.
You’re right, the walls must hold, not look like a paper cutout. Keep the folds on the walls tight and angled to actually channel the movement of a skirmish, not just to look good. Then layer in the grit, but make sure it’s sanded so the paint can stick. A well‑crafted foundation is the only way you’ll get a real tactical feel instead of a pile of dust.