![]() Once you've layed it over the face, now its time to heat up the foam. Use your pattern to trace and cut out a hole in the foam for the telescope eye to fit through. We start by cutting out a piece of 2 mm foam about an inch larger than the small base weve been working on. Now that you've made the under structure we are going to do the actual skinning. Place the made dome into the circle you made earlier and glue it into place from the back.įinally, glue the telescope eye down to the base.Ĭut 2 small pieces of 15 mm foam dowel about 3/4 in long for the bolts on the forehead and put aside for now. ![]() Again again, No one will see this, so it doesn't have to be pretty. Hot glue the edges of the 2 mm along the back of the dome. After the 20 seconds, it should be able to retain its shape pretty well. You don't need to stretch very much, just enough to have no wrinkles on the dome face. Stretch and wrap foam around the dome and hold it there for about 20 seconds. You'll need to heat up both sides for about 4 seconds each. Then, you'll use a heat gun to heat up a piece of 2 mm foam to stretch and wrap around the dome. Again, it doesn't have to be perfectly smooth because it is getting covered. Cut out that shape and round the piece into a dome with your dremel. Place that circle over a piece of 10 mm foam and trace out the inside circle. Once you've done that, you can hot glue all of those pieces down to the base.įor this, start by cutting out a strip of 10 mm foam 7/8 in wide and 7 in long and glue the ends together. I did not cut the eye hole until later but I recommend you do this first and round out the inside on the eye hole with your dremel BEFORE attaching those pieces. this does not have to be pretty because it will get covered. The forehead, nose, and cheek are 5 mm foam and the 2 circles under the nose and the eyebrow are 10 mm foam.Īll you have to do with those pieces is round them out with the sanding bit on your dremel on one side. So, in this step I created the understructure.Ĭut out the peices on the pattern with the corresponding foam. In order to do this method, you start with a base of shapes that you drape a very thin foam over. The way I did this was by a method called skinning. While they never say how old she is in the game, she looks a lot closer to the age of her in the Borderlands 2 timeline, making us guess that this takes place within a couple of years of those events.The next thing we need to do is make the shapes of the face. In Borderlands 2, she was 13 years old, but by the time Borderlands 3 was released, she was about 20. ![]() ![]() We can also tell that Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands takes place before the events of Borderlands 3 because of Tina’s age. Because of this, Wonderlands is closer to being a sequel to Borderlands 2 DLC Tiny Tina’s Assault on Dragon Keep, but not with Brick, Lilith, and Mordecai playing. The game revolves around one of Tina’s Bunkers & Badasses sessions where three new people not seen before in the series are running her campaign. Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands is not Borderlands 4 and has no significant standing on the overall story in the series. So is Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands actually Borderlands 4? In the case of Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands, it very obviously is a part of the Borderlands franchise with Tiny Tina being the face on the cover, but it dropping the series name could have people asking if it is the next step in the story. Games can be a little confusing when they start releasing spin-offs, including when games go by names that are different from where they first started.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |