But first the rocks and gravel. The first step is creating a mixture of aquarium gravel, kitty litter and playground sand in a 1-1-1 ratio. I mix this thoroughly in a bowl and keep stirring as I go because the sand finds its way to the bottom leaving the lighter gravel and kitty litter at the top. Next we need a thick-bodied glue, my favorite is Titebond wood glue. A wide sloppy line of this is squirted out along the base of the hill and I use a teaspoon to add the gravel mixture to the glue line. Always add a very generous amount of both glue and gravel mixture, the glue will soak upward through the mix binding the texture to the surface very effectively.
the sand falls between the cracks in the larger grit
and tends to congregate at the bottom of the bowl necessitating regular stirring
rocks and gravel falling from the hillside or washing downhill tend to collect at the foot of the vertical surface, so spread a sloppy bead of glue along those areas
then teaspoon a generous layer of the gravel mixture onto the wet glue
be sure to allow several hours of drying time to ensure that
the glue has a chance to adhere the maximum amount of grit
having allowed the glue to dry I overpainted it with more of the chocolate color,
once that had dried I gave a drybrushing of medium brown to see if I liked the level of texture
overall I'm pleased with the effect, next comes an overall light sand dusting
followed by some chinchilla dust, then another couple of lighter shades of drybrushing
once I have the surface in place and drybrushed to my satisfaction I will add some vegitation
Looking good Anton.
ReplyDeleteWow, that mix looks impressive!
ReplyDeleteGreat tip..
ReplyDeleteComing along very well!
ReplyDelete