Category: Models

Birthday Aquisitions #4: Figures

I’m a sucker for a good figure, as you probably know, and in that regard the birthday didn’t disappoint. They were a common gift item from a few people.

I haven’t opened any of these yet. I’ve still got some work to do with a new curio cabinet before I’m ready to populate it, so all these photos are boxed.

I had thought the chance of new Guyver figures was about zero for years now, so when Max Factory announced Figmas a couple of years back I was pretty happy! Female Guyver is the second in the line and pretty snazzy. There’s actually two versions, with the other being purple and based on the anime appearance.

I’ve posted about Aegis before, and she’s still a favourite of mine! This incredibly cute not-a-Nendroid (also from Good Smile) was a gift from JF! I’m looking forward to getting this one out and putting her next to her twin sisters 🙂

Now this is amazing. It’s my first Tamashii Nations figure, plus it’s a cute goth girl and she’s wearing dress/armor based on Gore Magala from Monster Hunter. Basically this is an ubër-otaku figure right up my alley. Also… it needs some construction! When I open and make her, she’ll get a dedicated post.

Florence got me this! She knows I’m a bit disturbed by René Auberjonois famous changeling from DS9, but not so much that I’m not proud of my very own! So now I have two, and this one even has legs!

I’ll never open this one by the way. I wouldn’t want to ruin the value 😉

Kit Bashing?

This is a Chaos Terminator Lord model kit by Games Workshop:

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I bought this a few months ago. I’d always wanted to assemble and paint a Warhammer model, and this guy was inexpensive and looked good. Here’s what I found inside the box:

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And here’s a close-up of the parts still on the runners:

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As someone with a decent amount of experience assembling model kits from Bandai or Kotobukiya I was a bit taken aback by what  I saw. For starters this is not a glueless kit. For seconders few – if any – of the connections have tabs or slots to strengthen them. For thirds the pieces are strongly attached to the runners and would need quite a bit of cleaning up after removal.

In short, it looked like a pain.

And that was before I saw the instructions:

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These are the instructions to make a ‘Chaos Terminator Sorceror‘. If you want to assemble it as a (melee style) ‘Lord’, you’d use the other sheet of instructions. Both ways have multiple possibilities, and you can see that during assembly you can mix-and-match parts as you see fit. Unlike a Gundam (where the weapons and sometimes even armor is removable and replaceable) this kit is final once made due to the gluing.

Assembly took a while and was a fiddly as I had feared/expected. To be honest it wasn’t really much fun at all! But I think my final version looks fairly nice:

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If you’re going to make a kit like this I strongly recommend using a low viscosity glue that can be applied with a brush since you’ll want to put tiny amounts in very specific locations.

Building the kit is only half the fun though, since it must be painted! Master painters can make these tiny kits absolutely come alive with their skilled paint jobs. For instance here’s an example of what someone did with this very model (remember it’s about 2 inches tall):

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Looks great doesn’t it?

Here’s where I ran into a bit of trouble. In short: Warhammer paints are bloody expensive! The basic Warhammer 40k space marine paint set of only five colours is about $20, which was more than this kit. If I wanted to buy all the recommended colours for this particular guy, it would have cost about $65! That’s probably ok if you’re building an army to play with (since Warhammer is a miniatures wargame), but crazy just for one tiny kit. I needed another solution.

One option was to take it to a Warhammer store and paint it for free since they encourage that. This would be great were there any Warhammer stores around here. I went into one in England and was tempted to spent an hour painting one of their free miniatures just for fun but didn’t have the time.

But it was during our very same trip to England that the solution appeared in the form of a freebie attached to a very inexpensive Doctor Who kids magazine:

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Most people will look at that and think “Oh free magnets!”. I looked at it and thought “Oh free paints!” And in vaguely Space Mariney colours as well! This was my salvation, and months after assembly I finally had the means to complete my Chaos Terminator Sorceror.

Here he is:

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I think I’ve done him justice wouldn’t you agree?

More Plastic

I received a lot of model and craft kits – of several types – for Christmas. This past month I’ve spent weekends building a few of them. 

 
KLS got me the above Gundam since I had told her I’d build any kit she bought me! I don’t know anything about it, and the design tends a bit too much toward the standard Gundam type for me but… this kit has a secret!

Here it is finished: 

 
Flashy isn’t it? Almost all of it is metallic gold, and it’s quite garish under a bright light! It’s one of the small kits (1/144 scale) and was an easy build, only taking about two hours. 

 
The above was from Joyce and Jim and at 1685 pieces is the biggest Tie Fighter Lego has ever made. I’d had my eye on this for a while and was very much looking forward to assembling it. Note the size of the box, photographed for scale next to one of the world’s largest silver sausages.

The kit was great fun to put together and took much less time than I expected. This is perhaps due to me having built only technic kits recently. Once completed, it looks great: 

 
It’s massive! The mini figure on the base gives you an idea, but I’d say the panels are about 40 cm high. I had to make space to display this one, which meant the Lego Death Star II had to be put in storage (after about 9 years).

Lastly another model kit, this time of a girl: 

 
This isn’t the first in the ‘Frame Arms Girl’ series, but I didn’t much like the previous. It’s by the same company that released the Etrian Odyssey kits I’ve blogged about previously, and features the same level of detail and wealth of options (such as weapons, armor pieces, hands and faces). 

 
She was a slightly challenging build – I’d say harder than Gundam but easier than a Zoid – but I think I did a good job.

Amusingly I bought this from Japan, and it was shipped simply wrapped in transparent bubble wrap with an address label attached! Despite the lack of a shipping box, it arrived in perfect condition 🙂