Helpful hint is to cut the ends of the bases at 45 degrees .So you can have pieces go together at right angle joins if you butt them and still have the Hedge line up straight if you flip around the angle the other way . You just have to modify how you add your material . I would sand the sharp corners to leave them slightly rounded .
Hoss, that looks just amazing. And thank you so much for all the ideas. I've struggled so much as I've only just started building my own Terrain huge help thank you.. Abraham
Awesome vid Mel! Really nice to see all the different types against each other. Very inspiring. Makes you realise that you could make different hedges for different environments; prim and proper wire wool for someone's garden, lichen for a farmyard hedgerow and coconut fibre for a rough forested area. Bravo sir!
Amazing video - lots of great ideas! My friend & I are currently making a *bunch* of hedges using the rubberized horse hair & coconut fiber. Thanks for the suggestions & inspiration!
Found this very useful, so thanks. I used regular foam sponges because I had one going spare, and I had some flock/small clump foliage I'd made from another sponge paint and glue earlier. My hedge and clump of bushes are currently waiting for the paint to dry so I can add the clump foliage-ish stuff. Already looks a lot better than the paint pots and telephone I was using to extend my few pieces of actual terrain I'd made earlier, and I'm sure it will look better once it's completely finished. And it has been pretty easy and fast so far.
Coconut fibre might make awesome grape vine. It amazes me there is someone in the world that does things Like I used to when I was a modeler years ago. I didn't want to spend thousands on a display. I will refer to your work often. I recently began miniature models again.
Again, thanks Mel! You're making a wonderful job! I've finally suceed to order lots of stuff (Javis, Woodland, etc.) but I've succeed to find Rubberised Horsehair because of you! (And you've make my day with that). You can't believe how it's hard to find THAT in France! It's a mess! Anyway, I've got my Horsehair now, and I'll be able to reproduce your incredible "bocages". Because they are really incredible and realistic. Hope to show all my work soon! So, again, thanks Mel, I'm really fan of your work and your passion!
And now I need to make the Horse hair hedges! They look so awesome. Well they all do. That and the coconut fibre. My favourites. Look so authentic. Would easily make great Bocage with those.
Hi Mel, I'm slowly going through your back-catalogue of videos and came across this one just as I am about to build my own hedges. I'm setting out to make 'indestructible' hedges which can be vacuum-cleaned and jet washed with an airbrush. I have my own method/materials for doing so, but your vulcanised horse-hair and coconut fibre have definitely peaked my interest and I'll be taking the shears to our pony's mane and tail and raiding the wife's hanging baskets very shortly. LOL Thanks for sharing your methods.
thank you for this. your tutorials are always so detailed and well thought out. very helpful and easy to follow for a beginner like me while also being chock full of information!
Theres a method I found which uses pipe insulation, rubbed with sandpaper and then painted in grass green. Another, from a modeller called Barry Norman, uses those green washing up pads with clump foliage stuck on. I used these for my model layout but I can say that they can be good for low cost wargaming terrain modules.
Recently made about 20 ft of hedges using the rubberized coconut fiber! Great stuff and I have tons left over from an A3 sheet of the stuff for shrubs and other stuff :D
When using the wire wool, use the stainless steel kind to avoid it going rusty and falling to bits. A voice of experience, My wire wool trees rusted! BB
Great video Mel. Probably been mentioned before but would it be better if the ends of scatter hedges, fences and wall bases were shaped to 45 degrees to form a point at each end instead of being square and then you can butt them together at different angles without the bases fouling each other. Dave
Fantastic thanks so much. I know this vid is a while ago but I've just found your channel. Its a pleasure watching your tutorials, u make me laugh too 🤣😉 Can u also use the ol tin foil screwed up in to a hedge shape and flock that too? Cheers thanks again Kaz from Oz 😊
Thank you so much! Amazing video and grate tips. The wire wool one was really useful. Sitting at home during corona virus lockdown, you dont have a lot of materials.
the coconut fiber "hedge" looks like it would work great for South Africa, Somalia/Ethiopia, and the Sudan. i'm going to have to give the green foam a try as well as the scrub pad.
My favorites are: Vulcanized - the most realistic one up close Lichen - good for untamed underbrush rather than garden hedges Unprimed coconut fiber - would have made some fantastic improvised cover for a trench scene, or dead bushes for an outback or desert scene. Just spray it with some matte clear coat instead of priming it with a color I'm not a fan of the clump foliage on solid cores. They look more like small islands covered with trees. They would be great for a micro-scale sea battle though. The fine flocking makes great trimmed hedges. It doesn't look so good on the lumpy cores.
Not that this is where I would buy them, but there's a good photo of what I'm talking about here: www.unoclean.com/Furnace-and-Air-Filter-414727.aspx?gclid=CjwKEAiA3qXBBRD4_b_V7ZLFsX4SJAB0AtEVGmowH1RGB5s3AnkgiIdNXxGE62RZKUAAGjwDtS2uGRoC8tzw_wcB In my area they happen to come in a nice green color, but you can always spray paint them first if needed.
Lichen after a while gets brittle and crumbles so I keep my hedges in a airtight container and add a damp sponge a day of so before I need to use them, it revives the lichen.
just wondering please do you have a video that explains sealing the clump foliage hedges with watered down pva?, is it just applied with a brush ? cheers
I didn’t quite catch where you said you bought that rubberised coconut fibre from? 😊 some of the ones I’ve seen for sale look too coarse for my tastes and I’d like that exact one.
I'm not sure where to find vulcanized "horse hair" 'round these parts but it looks very like the high-quality re-useable furnace filters that come from hardware stores and Home Depot/Lowes, etc. I always assumed that they were extruded plastic but they very well could be vulcanized coconut fibre. The newer ones are blue-black and have to be primed. If you're lucky you may come across an older yellow-brown one that can be used as is. Great video. I especially liked Wills' snowman. Someone's inherited his dad's talent.
Great vid. All the fine spray glues I've tried don't seem to dry properly, even when left on the radiator, so when I handle the bushes the branches just stick together and look awful. How long does the Blu tack take to dry?
I'm a new subscriber to your channel and I'm really enjoying it!..... One question about foliage and trees I'm building my first diorama for 164 scale (Hot Wheels, matchbox Etc.) The problem is I live in North Florida here in the states and it is a very small town with no hobby shops or craft stores..my question is could I use stuff that you would find in the yard to make leaves for trees grass etc. ?
Oh and I'm not really big on ordering stuff online because by time you pay for shipping and everything you're paying more than you normally would and at the moment I am out of work in a wheelchair !
This is not the most useful tutorial for me because I don't anticipate makind hedges any time soon, but the quality of the instruction and variety of techniques on display has my rapt attention. I should check out your other videos. 😅
Just recently subscribe to ya channel and can i say WOW thanks for producing such fantastic tutorials your already getting my cogs going with ideas for my layout many thanks ....had a sunday of watching a job lot of your videos keep up tje good work much luv
That snowman looked like Olaf 😂 Very well done! Loved the video, got me brainstorming in the morn. Id like to see you try your hand at Fall/Autumn colours Or creating dead versions of foliage you've already created. Even a link to creating detailed branch and bush structures lol. Thanks Mel 😊
Great ideas! The only problem seems to be finding rubberised coconut sheets. Doing a Google search turns up loads of offers...so long as you want to buy in bulk from India. Where do you find it?
Hi, my english is kinda basic and i'm starting with terrain building, and I wanted to know what's the second material you showed, the one that looks like little bushes.Thx
If you find a place to order it online please share :D Been looking for it some time now and couldn find some apart from whole matraces for lots of money.
I've got a question, I used reindeer moss to build some hedges, but after a few days the moss became really brittle. How can I fix this? I haven't flocked my hedges yet.
I'm enjoying your tutorial it's very informative. My question is if I want to make my scatter can I color the grinded foam lighter colors such as lilac or pink?
Hey Mel, I got some foliage fibre from Woodland scenics in a diorama kit and I know I’ve seen either you or Luke from Luke’s APS use it in a video but I can’t seem to find it. Have you used this product before, and are there any good uses for it within the wargaming scene?
Re-watching this because it remains such a classic guide. A must see for anyone making hedges.
I love that no matter where I click while skipping around, the first word is "Yeah". Very funny, Good tutorial.
Try drinking every time, yeah? :D
yeah
This video is one of the best bocage tutorials i've seen. Cheap mats, Easy to do, Looks fantastic.
what else could anyone ask for?
Mel, I love your enthusiasm & your ability to source materials from absolutely anywhere! Power to you, bro!
Thank you so, so much 💓 I'm building my mom a Christmas Village. My first ever, completely from scratch. I'll be binge watching your videos tonight. 🤣
Such a classic guide. I Come back to this for so many different theatres.
so much detail only one channel on youtube provides deep information🥰🥰🥰 I love your work sir. I will try some of these ideas for my sto-mo animation
your enthusiasm and just overall entertainment is great. Can happily watch these also amazing tips. Thank you.
To your first question, yes. Next one, yes. You can guess the rest.
Brilliant video!
Helpful hint is to cut the ends of the bases at 45 degrees .So you can have pieces go together at right angle joins if you butt them and still have the Hedge line up straight if you flip around the angle the other way . You just have to modify how you add your material . I would sand the sharp corners to leave them slightly rounded .
Hoss, that looks just amazing. And thank you so much for all the ideas. I've struggled so much as I've only just started building my own Terrain huge help thank you..
Abraham
Awesome vid Mel! Really nice to see all the different types against each other. Very inspiring. Makes you realise that you could make different hedges for different environments; prim and proper wire wool for someone's garden, lichen for a farmyard hedgerow and coconut fibre for a rough forested area. Bravo sir!
That's the plan bud
Amazing video - lots of great ideas! My friend & I are currently making a *bunch* of hedges using the rubberized horse hair & coconut fiber. Thanks for the suggestions & inspiration!
They'll look lovely mate!
TheTerrainTutor They're looking *great* - very natural looking.
Larry Irish
lovely mate
The BEST hedgerow tutorial I've watched so far!
Thanks!
No, thank you
Found this very useful, so thanks. I used regular foam sponges because I had one going spare, and I had some flock/small clump foliage I'd made from another sponge paint and glue earlier. My hedge and clump of bushes are currently waiting for the paint to dry so I can add the clump foliage-ish stuff. Already looks a lot better than the paint pots and telephone I was using to extend my few pieces of actual terrain I'd made earlier, and I'm sure it will look better once it's completely finished. And it has been pretty easy and fast so far.
Glad it helped you buddy
This helped so much with building the 1,20m of hedges I need for a scenario, thanks for tutorials like these!
My favourite is the one at the back, awesome work
Great Job, was just looking to make some hedges. This will definitely put me in the right direction! Love the snowman nice added touch.
Cheers buddy
Coconut fibre might make awesome grape vine. It amazes me there is someone in the world that does things Like I used to when I was a modeler years ago. I didn't want to spend thousands on a display. I will refer to your work often. I recently began miniature models again.
Again, thanks Mel! You're making a wonderful job!
I've finally suceed to order lots of stuff (Javis, Woodland, etc.) but I've succeed to find Rubberised Horsehair because of you! (And you've make my day with that).
You can't believe how it's hard to find THAT in France! It's a mess!
Anyway, I've got my Horsehair now, and I'll be able to reproduce your incredible "bocages".
Because they are really incredible and realistic.
Hope to show all my work soon!
So, again, thanks Mel, I'm really fan of your work and your passion!
Awesome sauce mate, happy crafting
And now I need to make the Horse hair hedges! They look so awesome. Well they all do. That and the coconut fibre. My favourites. Look so authentic. Would easily make great Bocage with those.
mine too
Those lichen and rubberised hair ones are stunning!
Hi Mel, I'm slowly going through your back-catalogue of videos and came across this one just as I am about to build my own hedges. I'm setting out to make 'indestructible' hedges which can be vacuum-cleaned and jet washed with an airbrush. I have my own method/materials for doing so, but your vulcanised horse-hair and coconut fibre have definitely peaked my interest and I'll be taking the shears to our pony's mane and tail and raiding the wife's hanging baskets very shortly. LOL Thanks for sharing your methods.
Happy crafting bud, let me know how you get on!
thank you for this. your tutorials are always so detailed and well thought out. very helpful and easy to follow for a beginner like me while also being chock full of information!
COCONUT FIBER! prefect for dead bushes and briars! i wish i would have thought of this! Thanks Mel. Your right those looks great
My 2nd fav let's make ever Mel! (after sandbags) :-) Great work as ever mate, super job. Top celeb appearance from Willow & Frosty too! ;-)
Thanks bud, she had to get in on the action lol
Theres a method I found which uses pipe insulation, rubbed with sandpaper and then painted in grass green. Another, from a modeller called Barry Norman, uses those green washing up pads with clump foliage stuck on. I used these for my model layout but I can say that they can be good for low cost wargaming terrain modules.
This is what I've been looking for. Thanks! Oh, nice snowman Will.
Recently made about 20 ft of hedges using the rubberized coconut fiber! Great stuff and I have tons left over from an A3 sheet of the stuff for shrubs and other stuff :D
Win!
It's the horsehair one for me - Good stuff mate ! ✌️😁👍
I like horsehair too mate
Excellent. Loved seeing all the different materials used and their outcomes. And loved Will's snowman :)
My personal favourite was the lichen. Thanks for this, Mel; going to give these a go too.
I'm going to the store now and looking for sponges all different kinds. Thanks Mr. Wizard. What a tip.
When using the wire wool, use the stainless steel kind to avoid it going rusty and falling to bits.
A voice of experience, My wire wool trees rusted! BB
Yeah you said Yeah like a Million times in this video.
Plus now I want Twizzlers🥺
Thanks a lot Pal^!!^
No problem 👍
Great video Mel. Probably been mentioned before but would it be better if the ends of scatter hedges, fences and wall bases were shaped to 45 degrees to form a point at each end instead of being square and then you can butt them together at different angles without the bases fouling each other. Dave
Hi Mel. You could also use the synthetic Aquarium filter material.
Never played with that, I'll check it out bud
Fantastic thanks so much. I know this vid is a while ago but I've just found your channel. Its a pleasure watching your tutorials, u make me laugh too 🤣😉 Can u also use the ol tin foil screwed up in to a hedge shape and flock that too?
Cheers thanks again
Kaz from Oz 😊
I pledge to never wedge my hedge on a ledge. But anyway I loved the vid. I appreciate how you show a variety of methods and styles. Thanks!
I pledge I can get behind but with an avi like that, it should be an oath mate ;-D
Great vid Mel! You had some ideas I had never thought of!
Hope they help bud
Thank you so much! Amazing video and grate tips. The wire wool one was really useful. Sitting at home during corona virus lockdown, you dont have a lot of materials.
1:06 that looks like what we refer to here in Florida as Deer Moss. If it is than i'm in luck, because it grows wild around here.
Yep, that's the stuff, we call it lichen here
It’s great to see that you have fun, while explaining. Keep going 👍
thanks bud
You are just amazing 😎🤘
the coconut fiber "hedge" looks like it would work great for South Africa, Somalia/Ethiopia, and the Sudan.
i'm going to have to give the green foam a try as well as the scrub pad.
Yeah, has a really dry scrub feel to it
Excellent video, Mel... please keep up the great work
Working on a build of Cragmaw Hideout for D&D...going to steal the scouring pad idea for the trees in the area outside the cave!
Love your videos of making trees and hedges. Can you please tell me what adhesive to use for layering static grass.
3:04 best part for sure
My favorites are:
Vulcanized - the most realistic one up close
Lichen - good for untamed underbrush rather than garden hedges
Unprimed coconut fiber - would have made some fantastic improvised cover for a trench scene, or dead bushes for an outback or desert scene. Just spray it with some matte clear coat instead of priming it with a color
I'm not a fan of the clump foliage on solid cores. They look more like small islands covered with trees. They would be great for a micro-scale sea battle though.
The fine flocking makes great trimmed hedges. It doesn't look so good on the lumpy cores.
Do you happen to know what he says in "wire..." I'm not a native English speaker. I loved how that one looked.
In the usa a great substitute for rubberized horse hair are natural furnace filters available at the big box home improvement stores.
Ah, we don't get those in the UK but then we don't really have furnaces, we have boilers and they don't have filters
TheTerrainTutor Here are some hedges made from them: ajs-wargaming.blogspot.com/2015/10/28mm-bocage-and-windmill-wip.html
Not that this is where I would buy them, but there's a good photo of what I'm talking about here: www.unoclean.com/Furnace-and-Air-Filter-414727.aspx?gclid=CjwKEAiA3qXBBRD4_b_V7ZLFsX4SJAB0AtEVGmowH1RGB5s3AnkgiIdNXxGE62RZKUAAGjwDtS2uGRoC8tzw_wcB
In my area they happen to come in a nice green color, but you can always spray paint them first if needed.
Allan Wright
Looks good stuff mate
Hey there, do you have a video going over your sealing process with the PVA? I think I know what you're talking about but would love to see it.
realistic flocking vid
Excellent tutorial buddy.
Bellissimo! 😻👍👍👍
Mi è piaciuto tanto questo video, complimenti 🎉
Grazie mille 🙏
Looks so good. I like making models and adding foliage and grass. How would you do a dead grass field around a house or figure?
A mixture of green and yellow static grass as tufts mate
thx for the response!!! could you give me a video example? i could send pics if you like?
Lichen after a while gets brittle and crumbles so I keep my hedges in a airtight container and add a damp sponge a day of so before I need to use them, it revives the lichen.
I've never had that problem, is yours preserved with glycerol?
just wondering please do you have a video that explains sealing the clump foliage hedges with watered down pva?, is it just applied with a brush ? cheers
Oi, ya lovely git! Do you know any good ways to make ivy in a good simple way?
I didn’t quite catch where you said you bought that rubberised coconut fibre from? 😊 some of the ones I’ve seen for sale look too coarse for my tastes and I’d like that exact one.
Great video! One question: why do you have to seal them with watered down PVA in the end? What happens if you don't?
That's an adorable apprentice you have there
sume of this can be used on model railways as well
Excellent video as usual, so many good ideas. The coconut fibre looks like brambles (rather than bracken :-) )
Great stuff! How would recommendation making recently dead bushes with browning foliage??
YEH? :D great tutorial! gonna make some normandy ish bocage scenery applying your tips!
I'm not sure where to find vulcanized "horse hair" 'round these parts but it looks very like the high-quality re-useable furnace filters that come from hardware stores and Home Depot/Lowes, etc. I always assumed that they were extruded plastic but they very well could be vulcanized coconut fibre. The newer ones are blue-black and have to be primed. If you're lucky you may come across an older yellow-brown one that can be used as is.
Great video. I especially liked Wills' snowman. Someone's inherited his dad's talent.
We don't get them over here, not many of us have furnaces
exactly what i was looking for thanks for the tips!
this tutorial is not really nice - it's simply amazing :)
thanks
looking good mel, good job!! the twiccors seem to suit you well 😊
Twiccors are right up there with feltvas mate
Brilliant content ❤
Another great tutorial - a practical tutorial.
Thank you.
Tony
Great vid. All the fine spray glues I've tried don't seem to dry properly, even when left on the radiator, so when I handle the bushes the branches just stick together and look awful. How long does the Blu tack take to dry?
Another great vid Mel, my favourites are the horsehair and coconut pieces,awesome......oh and where can I get a pair of twizzers from :)
I shall be supplying them free with every order of feltvas
Anyone know were i can get vulcanised coconut fibre in Australia ? Loving this channel !
upholstery shops?
I needed this for Zombiecide. Have a thumbs up!
What about making flock with hjust green pot scourers? Should be quick because they are green already
another awesome tutorial mate, could you possibly tell me where you get the epvc to make the bases, and how you cut it?
scrap from sign printers, just with a stanley knife (xacto?) mate
Cheers marra!
I'm a new subscriber to your channel and I'm really enjoying it!..... One question about foliage and trees I'm building my first diorama for 164 scale (Hot Wheels, matchbox Etc.) The problem is I live in North Florida here in the states and it is a very small town with no hobby shops or craft stores..my question is could I use stuff that you would find in the yard to make leaves for trees grass etc. ?
Oh and I'm not really big on ordering stuff online because by time you pay for shipping and everything you're paying more than you normally would and at the moment I am out of work in a wheelchair !
Yes but it has to be dried, nothing fresh and seal it afterwards
Thanks for the info I appreciate it!
This is not the most useful tutorial for me because I don't anticipate makind hedges any time soon, but the quality of the instruction and variety of techniques on display has my rapt attention.
I should check out your other videos. 😅
To make small bushes say N scale i mix pva with scatter grass. Stir and goes lumpy. Let it dry, end up with lots of small bushes.
Bigger bushes use green pan scrubber, pva and rolled in scatter grass.
Where did you buy vulcanised coconut fibres from please. Is there a link I could use ?
Wow…pretty cool. Thanks for this inspiration. Really great video!!!
Does the yellow upholstery foam or the green floral foam not melt from aerosol sprays?
A tiny amount but as they're just substructures, it doesn't really matter mate
Hi where do you get the Coconut fiber from in the UK couldn't quite catch the name? Tried to find some online but the prices seem pretty high. Thanks
Just recently subscribe to ya channel and can i say WOW thanks for producing such fantastic tutorials your already getting my cogs going with ideas for my layout many thanks ....had a sunday of watching a job lot of your videos keep up tje good work much luv
That snowman looked like Olaf 😂
Very well done!
Loved the video, got me brainstorming in the morn.
Id like to see you try your hand at Fall/Autumn colours Or creating dead versions of foliage you've already created. Even a link to creating detailed branch and bush structures lol. Thanks Mel 😊
Great ideas! The only problem seems to be finding rubberised coconut sheets. Doing a Google search turns up loads of offers...so long as you want to buy in bulk from India. Where do you find it?
Great Tutorial loved the Rubberised Horse hair. Couldn`t quite hear the name of the Workshop where you get it from? Something ST?
Thanks in advance
Hi, my english is kinda basic and i'm starting with terrain building, and I wanted to know what's the second material you showed, the one that looks like little bushes.Thx
its's lichen mate
Where on the antinocites site is the vulcanised horse/coconut hair? That looks fantastic, but i cant for the life of me find it.
Have you tried emailing them?
If you find a place to order it online please share :D Been looking for it some time now and couldn find some apart from whole matraces for lots of money.
coconut fiber is also used to line hanging baskets for plants, I see at Walmart often. near the garden section.
This may sound like a dumb question, but what are you using the base? Foam?
Where did you get the coconut fiber?
Plant liners
This is absolutely amazing!
Hi mate i love the stuff but i cant find the basing material anywhere..
I've got a question, I used reindeer moss to build some hedges, but after a few days the moss became really brittle. How can I fix this? I haven't flocked my hedges yet.
I'm enjoying your tutorial it's very informative. My question is if I want to make my scatter can I color the grinded foam lighter colors such as lilac or pink?
What company sells that vulcanized coconut fiber?
upholstery suppliers mate
As an example, www.onlinefabricstore.net/1-x-24-rubberized-hair-.htm
hi it's called coir and used in upholstery making
I’m loving this,so don’t be harsh with me but let’s make drinking game,take a shot every time he says yeah😂🤣
Where do I find leaves? I've looked for light green leaves and I cant find any.
Hey Mel, I got some foliage fibre from Woodland scenics in a diorama kit and I know I’ve seen either you or Luke from Luke’s APS use it in a video but I can’t seem to find it.
Have you used this product before, and are there any good uses for it within the wargaming scene?