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You are a cheap bastard. I love it. I saw this in my sub que before work and watched it. Very nifty idea with the plastic. But I have a question, if I wanted to do this with a book should I use an adhesive or will it shrink enough to attach itself to the cardboard of the book?
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For that Id use adhesive.
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Cool technique! I've done them with saran wrap before, but this is a lot better. And those Pitini Enterprises skeletons look pretty good for 30 bones! The order time seems a little crazy. Order in January and get them in August.
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YEah, China is far.
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Not only is it far, but I got an e-mail from Len at Pitini this morning. He sent me a catalog and a list of stuff still available to ship this August, and the skeletons aren't on it. I guess they are popular. Go figure.
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Allen, honestly, you're my personal Haunt Jiminy Cricket. Inspiring me to do more and go further. As always, the tutorial is super helpful, easy and saves me a boat load of money. Thanks!Last edited by CatacombProductions; 07-15-2011, 07:47 AM.
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Not really, you use plastic all over in every building not just haunts. If it makes you feel better replace a plastic garbage can with a metal one and that will balance the amount of plastic in your show, one small garbage can should be worth about six or seven plastic covered corpses.
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Senior Brushmaster, I did some epoxy crack repair inspired by your 1 inch brush skills and I think I used a lot less epoxy than I normally would have at $33 a quart. I might have looked real proffesional doing the work too!
Thank you Allen!sigpic
Another fabulous post from the U.S.Department of Wild Imaginings, now in spectaclar stereo, sponsored by the Adhesives and Sealants Council, suggesting ways to stick things together since the 1800s. Not fabulous in a gay way. Your results may vary. Illinois residents add 8% sales tax. These posts have been made by professional post makers, do not try this type of posting on your own without extensive training, lovely assistants and a trusty clown horn.
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Originally posted by Allen H View PostNot really, you use plastic all over in every building not just haunts. If it makes you feel better replace a plastic garbage can with a metal one and that will balance the amount of plastic in your show, one small garbage can should be worth about six or seven plastic covered corpses.
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Yeah that practice is why "Wicker Burlap Land" theme park is never going to get off the ground.
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