Awesome! I find it incredible how you managed to make those drones with so little stuff. I also think the idea of them communicating with music is pretty cool.
Haha thanks a lot! Yep that's the spirit, my idea its to make the most approachable Building stuff from trash.... and if I use let's say: Extremely rare plasma rifle from 40k assault on black reach box.... That's precisely not easy to get haha.... while pen parts... are everywhere!
@@Lorfyed Haha thanks! Glad you like it ! Yep I want to do more stuff of fallout and I always have ideas becauae it's an inmensly rich world..... BUT once in a while you just want to do hobbits with guns to "rest" between projects ;P
@@brunokopte1347 Wow haha Thanks a lot for that Compliment! Yep I believe that for creating desings (specially if you are using trash) the less overcomplicated details the easiest its for everyone to replicate it and the its more fun / and usually it gaves you a kind of "canvas" to be free when painting or looking to, such as the simplicity and sexyness of ww2 piston powered fighters, and then the first jets... Or in fiction for example in fallout the T 51 power armor, or the Bungie era Spartan armors and vehicles.. It gaves a kind of "this thing, this design" is grounded, even if it's on a fiction setting.
@@AlacranMiniatures Agree a lot. Too many overcomplicated designs facilitated by easy digital modeling these days. Even the new Evangelion movies, which I liked a lot, can be criticized by some exageration when it comes to CG. Btw, are you familiar with Phil Tipett's Mad God? Seems like you would like it.
@@brunokopte1347 Nop, Phil Tippet its a familiar name for me but I didn't see that film, I will add it to the: To watch list...(the promotional images I see on the Internet are cool BTW!)
@@AlacranMiniatures Not a movie for everyone, you might like the designs but not the movie itself. It's a couple decades of work, fueled by his wife's death, his thoughts of suicide in the middle of Jurassic Park etc. More like a nightmare in which he lets out his inner demons than actual movie. But the designs alone are inspiring.
@@brunokopte1347 Sadly some of the best pieces of art are fueled by nightmares. Like the Lord of the rings and Tolkien experiences on the battle of the Somme Or Don quijote and cervantes on the battle of lepanto Or The offspring singer Dexter Holland with the song: Gone Away But yep the designs of this film look Rad "quite literally becuz of cool gasmasks"
Nice work. I am currently making up a couple of toy 'space bases' for youngsters, think I'll try giving them some pen-bots. These sets are 1:72 (the cheapest option).
@@mikesmith2905 this guys are at 1/35 scale But it could fit properly in a weird scale such as the warhammer heoric one.... At 1/72 scale I imagine that it would be as long as the engine and propeller part of a spitfire or Mustang, More or less (so this ones would be bigger than a person) BUT if you use smaller parts of pens you could achieve something similar to this ones, for example using the clicker of the pen as "main body" and as "turbines" plastic parts of the Ink tubes :O Ill hope this help you ;P
@@AlacranMiniatures Yes, but cutting things down I could make it work I think. Toys for imaginative play are hard to find these days, that's why I make up my sets. I get asked mainly for world war two sets with knights and knaves and Sci-Fi in equal second place, the first two are well served but sci-fi is hard! I use Dark Dream Studios Space Battles sets 1 and 2 for soldiers (sometimes bolstered with a local militia from Airfix paratroops), Dark and Light Alliance Stalkers as space pirates, various ground crews as space base personnel, various ancients as civilians, some of the Dark and Light Alliance and Caesar fantasy figures as aliens. Space ships I have to make as the only ones on the market are 'merchandising' and hence over-priced, for land vehicles I now use cheap 3D printed obscure cold war vehicles. A few robots would be good to have. Thanks for posting, look forward to seeing more of your work.
@@mikesmith2905 hehe thanks! Yep there are out there nice cold war sets like the 1/35 Walker bulldogs or IS 3 at something like 20, or 16 €.. BTW: There are cheap starships of Lightyear film I guess, you can pick a zerg destroyer wich is like 20 € also and at 1/72 could be a Frigate, Or a Mining space rig thing.... wich also carries 1 drop pod. Yep that ship could be identified as a Lightyear ship, But with a coat of yellow or grey and a few bits... you'll have a completely new thing! :0
@@AlacranMiniatures I'll check those out. I give my sets away and I'm retired so cost is an issue and I try to make everything in ways the youngster can copy. I can get 3D printed vehicles for £5-6, for space ships I have a collection of domed tops from milk shake drinks, add a self cover button to cover the hole on top and a disc of foamcore in the bottom. Landing legs are dress making pins pushed through press-studs (poppers in the US) with a winding of paper to make them look like hydraulic rams (secured on the inside with polyurethane glue (gorilla glue) as it foams up and sets hard. In 1:32 (for 3-10 year olds) I use 2mm greyboard (in the US I believe that's 'chipboard', the stuff you get at the back of a writing pad). I make a simple box with a wedge or curved front end and a sloped rear with lolly sticks to add detail to the sides and top, if you slope the back at 50 degrees you can hinge the rear ramp with a scrap of cloth and it'll stay closed as you run round the garden with it. The landing gear is lolly sticks on edge with extra long matches either side to brace them. Total cost about £1.50, I paint them with house paint. Currently making some flying saucers in 1:72 using drain pipe collar fittings, should look like the ships in the TV show the Invaders but gluing to UPCV is difficult. Plan is to have a removeable top and a detailed interior (always goes down well if you can put people inside).
@@mikesmith2905 wow that's a lot of cool and useful info! Hmmmm to make a removable top for the UFO I will add some kind of magnets like neodymium ones (you can buy those on hobby stores or dollarstores) I added magnets to my Hobbit tank and also on this drones or bots for having some "movement" or modularity to put different versions. Also fridge magnets should work but they are less powerful than those little chromed neodymium dudes!
What a beautifull concept! And the result is awsome as well!
Haha thank you very much!
Really enjoy these mini scratch building projects.
@@vincentvandevorst5575 that's nice! Thanks! RN I'm finishing the final touches on the next scratchbuild vid :O
Awesome! I find it incredible how you managed to make those drones with so little stuff. I also think the idea of them communicating with music is pretty cool.
Haha thanks a lot! Yep that's the spirit, my idea its to make the most approachable Building stuff from trash.... and if I use let's say: Extremely rare plasma rifle from 40k assault on black reach box.... That's precisely not easy to get haha.... while pen parts... are everywhere!
I love your work, and the European Fallout story is a fantastic idea. Please keep at it!
@@Lorfyed Haha thanks! Glad you like it ! Yep I want to do more stuff of fallout and I always have ideas becauae it's an inmensly rich world..... BUT once in a while you just want to do hobbits with guns to "rest" between projects ;P
The creativity, inspirations and simplicity are great.
@@brunokopte1347 Wow haha Thanks a lot for that Compliment! Yep I believe that for creating desings (specially if you are using trash) the less overcomplicated details the easiest its for everyone to replicate it and the its more fun / and usually it gaves you a kind of "canvas" to be free when painting or looking to, such as the simplicity and sexyness of ww2 piston powered fighters, and then the first jets...
Or in fiction for example in fallout the T 51 power armor, or the Bungie era Spartan armors and vehicles.. It gaves a kind of "this thing, this design" is grounded, even if it's on a fiction setting.
@@AlacranMiniatures Agree a lot. Too many overcomplicated designs facilitated by easy digital modeling these days. Even the new Evangelion movies, which I liked a lot, can be criticized by some exageration when it comes to CG.
Btw, are you familiar with Phil Tipett's Mad God? Seems like you would like it.
@@brunokopte1347 Nop, Phil Tippet its a familiar name for me but I didn't see that film, I will add it to the: To watch list...(the promotional images I see on the Internet are cool BTW!)
@@AlacranMiniatures Not a movie for everyone, you might like the designs but not the movie itself. It's a couple decades of work, fueled by his wife's death, his thoughts of suicide in the middle of Jurassic Park etc. More like a nightmare in which he lets out his inner demons than actual movie. But the designs alone are inspiring.
@@brunokopte1347 Sadly some of the best pieces of art are fueled by nightmares.
Like the Lord of the rings and Tolkien experiences on the battle of the Somme
Or Don quijote and cervantes on the battle of lepanto
Or The offspring singer Dexter Holland with the song: Gone Away
But yep the designs of this film look Rad "quite literally becuz of cool gasmasks"
U give allot of inspiration to me for build anything toys (spcl. mini toy's) from recycle around the place 😊🙏 thanks very much
@@dirgantara624 Hehe Glad to hear that! ;P
Nice work. I am currently making up a couple of toy 'space bases' for youngsters, think I'll try giving them some pen-bots. These sets are 1:72 (the cheapest option).
@@mikesmith2905 this guys are at 1/35 scale But it could fit properly in a weird scale such as the warhammer heoric one....
At 1/72 scale I imagine that it would be as long as the engine and propeller part of a spitfire or Mustang, More or less (so this ones would be bigger than a person)
BUT if you use smaller parts of pens you could achieve something similar to this ones, for example using the clicker of the pen as "main body" and as "turbines" plastic parts of the Ink tubes :O
Ill hope this help you ;P
@@AlacranMiniatures Yes, but cutting things down I could make it work I think. Toys for imaginative play are hard to find these days, that's why I make up my sets. I get asked mainly for world war two sets with knights and knaves and Sci-Fi in equal second place, the first two are well served but sci-fi is hard! I use Dark Dream Studios Space Battles sets 1 and 2 for soldiers (sometimes bolstered with a local militia from Airfix paratroops), Dark and Light Alliance Stalkers as space pirates, various ground crews as space base personnel, various ancients as civilians, some of the Dark and Light Alliance and Caesar fantasy figures as aliens. Space ships I have to make as the only ones on the market are 'merchandising' and hence over-priced, for land vehicles I now use cheap 3D printed obscure cold war vehicles. A few robots would be good to have. Thanks for posting, look forward to seeing more of your work.
@@mikesmith2905 hehe thanks! Yep there are out there nice cold war sets like the 1/35 Walker bulldogs or IS 3 at something like 20, or 16 €..
BTW: There are cheap starships of Lightyear film I guess, you can pick a zerg destroyer wich is like 20 € also and at 1/72 could be a Frigate, Or a Mining space rig thing.... wich also carries 1 drop pod.
Yep that ship could be identified as a Lightyear ship, But with a coat of yellow or grey and a few bits... you'll have a completely new thing! :0
@@AlacranMiniatures I'll check those out. I give my sets away and I'm retired so cost is an issue and I try to make everything in ways the youngster can copy. I can get 3D printed vehicles for £5-6, for space ships I have a collection of domed tops from milk shake drinks, add a self cover button to cover the hole on top and a disc of foamcore in the bottom. Landing legs are dress making pins pushed through press-studs (poppers in the US) with a winding of paper to make them look like hydraulic rams (secured on the inside with polyurethane glue (gorilla glue) as it foams up and sets hard. In 1:32 (for 3-10 year olds) I use 2mm greyboard (in the US I believe that's 'chipboard', the stuff you get at the back of a writing pad). I make a simple box with a wedge or curved front end and a sloped rear with lolly sticks to add detail to the sides and top, if you slope the back at 50 degrees you can hinge the rear ramp with a scrap of cloth and it'll stay closed as you run round the garden with it. The landing gear is lolly sticks on edge with extra long matches either side to brace them. Total cost about £1.50, I paint them with house paint. Currently making some flying saucers in 1:72 using drain pipe collar fittings, should look like the ships in the TV show the Invaders but gluing to UPCV is difficult. Plan is to have a removeable top and a detailed interior (always goes down well if you can put people inside).
@@mikesmith2905 wow that's a lot of cool and useful info!
Hmmmm to make a removable top for the UFO I will add some kind of magnets like neodymium ones (you can buy those on hobby stores or dollarstores) I added magnets to my Hobbit tank and also on this drones or bots for having some "movement" or modularity to put different versions.
Also fridge magnets should work but they are less powerful than those little chromed neodymium dudes!
Looks like something out of atomic heart
Yep I guess I say that atomic heart was a big reference on the 0:30 sec