Normal Orc Infantry. Using Tonoborus's model. The teeth and metal studs on leather armor where kinda of a pain to paint.
Orc Archers. Using Tonoborus's model.
Skeleton Swordsman. Using Tonoborus's model. One of the skeletons snapped in two while removing his supports, right where his spine meets his pelvis. I glued him back together facing a different direction than the others. He has a slightly more dramatic pose (he's the middle guy in back row).
I have been slightly tempted to replace Tonoboru's Skeleton Warriors with the race specific skeletons from Dogs of War, pictured here, just haven't been willing to dedicate the time to reprint stuff thats done, when there are so many things not yet done.
Skeleton Bowmen. Using Tonoborus's model. These like the skeleton warriors painted rather fast.
Zombies. Using Tonoborus's model. When printing these, one model's leg simply fell off, it must have shifted during the print and so wasn't connected to the body. So its a zombie, what should I do? Of coarse his leg fell off and ends in a pool of blood underneath him. Sure he is currently Looney Tooning it, as he has no idea his leg feel off.
I painted each zombie with different body damage. Patches of missing skin, revealing the top of the skull here and there. A few I used my exact-o knife to remove the nose, eye and/or jaw and painted in the damage. The last fellow I spent a bit of time cutting an arm off and the other hand, letting me swing the axe around so he is dragging the axe and missing an arm. All of these edits were done post printing, just a knife, some glue, and paint to sell the effects.
This puts me up to 134 monsters painted, 386 monsters 3D printed of the 558 needed. As of March 8th, 2025.That's all for this post, may your lantern always stay lit.
DeMagic Tutor out.







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