This the paint job I'm going to show people who think you need an airbrush for everything. It looks like colour shift paints and you did it by hand! Awesome work! 🎨
The intro was Fantastic!! You had me LMAO!!! The transitions, sounds, music selection, and prop build were spot on! I loved everything about this video from start to finish. Well done, brother!!!
I too loved the intro, hilarious. (Filled with candy. No pain. No I'm sure it's candy) I just vaguely remember the original Dune, can't wait to see this one. Thanks for something new and always different.
I love it, fantastic work and I am also a HUGE fan of the new Dune . They did an outstanding job. Can't wait for the sequel(s). Also love how you show that you can be a fan of multiple genre's and enjoy the process of building some of the props.
May I ask... how the heck wasnt I already subscribed to your channel>? I've been wanting to model/print one of these for myself.... you absolutely killed this project!!!
Awesome! Loved the layering of paint to get that look and all the care that goes into these props as always. Another great video, and I laughed at the Roy Kent reference in the outtakes. Proof that he really IS every-f'ing-where -- including Arrakis! lol
...that intro was so great, because I literally asked myself while watching the movie if it wasn't a little bit extrem that you die. Also the prop looks awesome.
Looks great! For those without 3D printers, this would be pretty easy to scratchbuild from, say, foam: Before painting, it looks just like a piece of miniatures terrain, and could be made the same way.
You guys are so awesome!! The intro was hilariously fantastic! Love seeing how the two of you work together on projects and the prop looks way cool! Guess I need to watch the movie now. Keep up the great work Brian!
Great job guys...you two are so cute 😍 enjoy your videos 📹 please keep them coming 🙏 and here to help get your videos 📹 out to everyone 😀 😊 too enjoy thanks guys
Awesome Intro! You are without a doubt the luckiest couple in the world to have each other and have a hobby that you both enjoy and play off each others abilities. She has the best eye for painting I have ever seen in awhile. Bob Ross would be proud. 🙂 You two can take a cardboard box and some paint, weathering stuff and make a real life Borg Cube with nothing else but that. Thanks for the video. Remember that is not just a sculpting tool... LOL LLAP 🖖
This could be made out of wood. I'm resisting the urge not to try it this weekend and finish some of the many projects I'm already in the middle of. #TooManyProjects
So I am currently trying to print a model myself, but I am trying to print it on my neptune 3 max which is an fdm style printer. I'm not exactly confident that it is going to print all the tiles and come out defect-free. Did you have any issues printing yours with supports falling off? Your print shown here looks flawless. Any tips and advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
BRIAN THOMPSON I'M STILL LMFAO YOU AND YOUR WIFE ARE BEYOND AWESOME. I LOVE DUNE TOO AND YOU GUYS ACTING OUT A SCENE WITH A COMICAL TWIST OF THE CLASSIC FILM WAS AWESOME.
The prop looks amazing in the model and the painting. The opener was great also. I am saddened tho at the lack of commitment to the bit that Carissa didn't shave her head.
That is by far the best version of the box I've seen. The Bene Gesserit's Reverend Mother would likely mistake this for real and have a serious problem sifting the humans from the animals. I've been looking all over for a finished (painted) prop of this magnitude but haven't found anyone willing to make or sell them. I see that your thing is for people to go out and build such a masterpiece, but for the less artistically inclined, like myself, I would waste a lot of time and money, ending up with an extremely sloppy mess that would cause more pain for me than the Gom Jabbar test itself. So, shot in the dark, would you be willing to recreate this and sell it? The cost would surely have to reflect the time and effort you both put into such a beautiful piece. I'm willing to pay a decent amount of Solaris (or USD) for your generosity and art. If not, no worries, I'm sure you are both busy and have many other projects to do.
Interesting Doc. I don’t actually think of it as old school vs new school. It took me around 10 hours to 3D model the box. There is a fair amount of time spent getting the model right; size, proportions, etc. the. The process of printing the box was a lot of trial and error; fill, position, etc. So I think what I’m saying is, there are different forms of “making” that go into things. If I had spent the same amount of time working a piece of MDF on a band saw or table saw, folks see that as “old school,” but because it was on a computer it’s not the same? Plus all the weathering and painting was done traditionally. All in all, I think there is value in the creative process no matter the format or medium 🤷♂️
Awesome, so glad to see it print so well in the end man and what a wonderful result, it was touch and go there right? Thanks for reaching out though, I feel honoured to have somehow helped the build LOL 👊👊
“…She turned it and Paul saw that one side was open-black and oddly frightening. No light penetrated that open blackness”. It would be great to use one of the “ultra-blacks” for the interior. It would not have the same satisfaction as candy, but candy is for humans who survive the test! Best to inspire fright before the test…
Great as always. But I am realy sorry to tell you that , ye no it's absolutly not like that (Villeneuve name) It shoud be in phonetic somthing close to : vil-nev
Nice weathering and distressing job, but I would have preferred if it wasn’t 3d printed. You could have built it up from styrene of different thicknesses or even wood. I watch this channel to get ideas on how to make something with nothing, not how to make something from a fully complete 3d printed model.
Consider this my friend. The medium of 3D modeling and the act of scratch building out of styrene or foam can be much the same. It took a deal of creative time to model the box in a virtual world. I found it as much of a creative challenge to model the box, as if I had sculpted it out of foam or wood. I just used differ t skills. Then learning the correct setting and. Such needed to get the box to print correct was also a learning curve. The curing and finishing process was a new learning curve as well. We provided physical battle damage to the box, hand painted each brick, and finished the overall appearance with hand dry brushing. So I suppose what I’m saying in the end is this; we all have our approach of creation. We all have the medium we prefer. But is the act of “making” any less if you use one method over another? Are you less inspired because someone 3D models, prints, and paints than you are if they scratch build from foam or something else physical? You might be, and that’s understandable, but for us it’s the act of using your imagination no matter the medium.
This is not someone else’s, I 3D modeled it myself from start to finish. Then printed it. I then aged it, we painted it, and weathered it. I think you missed all of that . . . Bummer.
So what you are saying is that we should only ever scratch build projects? That by 3D printing we are not "making." That a project can not be called "how to" if you 3D print, laser, or CNC? . . . interesting. I disagree. But then we have learned that no matter the situation someone will undoubtably not enjoy the content, the project, or something in between.
@@TheSmugglersRoom I just feel the title was misleading. I use all of the technologies that you have mentioned, as well as scratch building. Perhaps if the title was more like "Making a pain box from Dune look good" Or "Finishing effects for a Dune pain box"
Consider this my friend. The medium of 3D modeling and the act of scratch building out of styrene or foam can be much the same. It took a deal of creative time to model the box in a virtual world. I found it as much of a creative challenge to model the box, as if I had sculpted it out of foam or wood. I just used differ t skills. Then learning the correct setting and. Such needed to get the box to print correct was also a learning curve. The curing and finishing process was a new learning curve as well. We provided physical battle damage to the box, hand painted each brick, and finished the overall appearance with hand dry brushing. So I suppose what I’m saying in the end is this; we all have our approach of creation. We all have the medium we prefer. But is the act of “making” any less if you use one method over another? Are you less inspired because someone 3D models, prints, and paints than you are if they scratch build from foam or something else physical? You might be, and that’s understandable, but for us it’s the act of using your imagination no matter the medium.
I'm not getting the issue with the 3D design I'm reading here, everyone has their preference if course but times a changing and computers don't just 'pop' a model into a existence, they have to be modelled and planned and that takes lots of work and skill 👊
This the paint job I'm going to show people who think you need an airbrush for everything. It looks like colour shift paints and you did it by hand! Awesome work! 🎨
Thank you very much! really appreciate the compliment!
Fantastic work Karissa and Brian! =D
Thank you guys!!!
can you put the 3D model in the description... plese 🤞🤞🤞
Carissa was awesome!
I think so too! Thank you!
The intro was Fantastic!! You had me LMAO!!! The transitions, sounds, music selection, and prop build were spot on! I loved everything about this video from start to finish. Well done, brother!!!
Thanks so much bro! Really appreciate it!!
Outstanding. That paint job is just magic!
Thank you! Carissa did an amazing job on it!
Absolutely gorgeous! Beautiful work!
Thank you so much!
Wow, amazin job, guys! It's faithful to the original prop and also a beautiful piece of art.
Wow, thank you!
Love the “I want to hear more Roy Kent.” Great video as always!
"BELIEVE"
Man that intro was 10/10!!!!! awesome work and great build.
Thanks a ton!
Great skit as always, I loved seeing the paint process. Very cool
Thanks so much!
I too loved the intro, hilarious. (Filled with candy. No pain. No I'm sure it's candy)
I just vaguely remember the original Dune, can't wait to see this one.
Thanks for something new and always different.
It is an absolute must see!!! Glad you liked the video, and thank you for watching!
That intro was spectacular! Hilarious 😄 Big fan of Dune.
Thank you very much!
this is one amazing piece! The detailing, the aging, the work on the colours, everything top notch
Thank you so much 😀
As a Sci-Fi lover, I really like this project, really awesome, also, guys, your version of that scene is epic! 😂👏👏
Really appreciate it my friend!
What a great opening to an episode simply fantastic!!! And treating each brick individually is pure genius!! The weathering is incredible!!
Thanks so much!
I love it, fantastic work and I am also a HUGE fan of the new Dune . They did an outstanding job. Can't wait for the sequel(s). Also love how you show that you can be a fan of multiple genre's and enjoy the process of building some of the props.
Thank you very much! Yes indeed. Love so many films!
Such a beautiful work !! Thanks you two for the good time I had watching ! :)
Our pleasure! Glad you enjoyed it!
Looks great
Thank you!!
I love how you both put together a gorgeous prop!!!
Thank you very much!
@@TheSmugglersRoom you are welcome 🤗
Awesome project!
Thank you!
Love the video! I’m excited to see you make more dune props
Thank you!
May I ask... how the heck wasnt I already subscribed to your channel>? I've been wanting to model/print one of these for myself.... you absolutely killed this project!!!
Thank you so much!! Big fans of yours Jessy!! Appreciate you!
Love that intro! You guys have made an incredible prop! The design, paint and weathering are top notch!
Thank you my friend!
Awesome! Loved the layering of paint to get that look and all the care that goes into these props as always. Another great video, and I laughed at the Roy Kent reference in the outtakes. Proof that he really IS every-f'ing-where -- including Arrakis! lol
No doubt.... such a great character... Thank you so much for watching!
...that intro was so great, because I literally asked myself while watching the movie if it wasn't a little bit extrem that you die.
Also the prop looks awesome.
LOL, thank you Jack!
Love the amazing intro!
I'm glad you like it. Thank you!
Great video!
Thanks!
Looks great! For those without 3D printers, this would be pretty easy to scratchbuild from, say, foam: Before painting, it looks just like a piece of miniatures terrain, and could be made the same way.
Thanks for the tips! You are 100% correct!
A beutiful build. Love it.
Glad you like it!
Nice, job please post your settings. On your resin
Thank you! Will do as soon as I can.
You guys are so awesome!! The intro was hilariously fantastic! Love seeing how the two of you work together on projects and the prop looks way cool! Guess I need to watch the movie now. Keep up the great work Brian!
Thanks so much!! You better watch it Tony!
Great job guys...you two are so cute 😍 enjoy your videos 📹 please keep them coming 🙏 and here to help get your videos 📹 out to everyone 😀 😊 too enjoy thanks guys
That's fantastic Roger, thank you!!! Glad you enjoy them, we have some fun while making them, which is the most important thing!
Awesome Intro!
You are without a doubt the luckiest couple in the world to have each other and have a hobby that you both enjoy and play off each others abilities. She has the best eye for painting I have ever seen in awhile. Bob Ross would be proud. 🙂
You two can take a cardboard box and some paint, weathering stuff and make a real life Borg Cube with nothing else but that.
Thanks for the video. Remember that is not just a sculpting tool... LOL
LLAP
🖖
Thanks so much!!
Your cool and just keep doing what you love
Thank you!
Awesome vid man loved the new film.
Glad you enjoyed it Thank you!
@@TheSmugglersRoom no worries
"You fools"...there was some *spice* alright LOL
That was fun :)
LOL!! Thanks!!
Brian, love the job you did and paint job is amazing. Any chance you could do a similar video/prop without using the 3D printer?
perhaps some day i could give that a go. I used the 3D printer as it seemed to be the best way to get it done.
This could be made out of wood. I'm resisting the urge not to try it this weekend and finish some of the many projects I'm already in the middle of. #TooManyProjects
Was it a pain to make?
:>
"Look in the box young Atredies"
"What's in the box?"
"This joke."
"AAAAUGH!"
LOL!!!!!
you guys are perfect and i love this video . . . very cool stuff
Thanks Asi! Thank you for watching the channel!
I may have missed it in the video, but did you 3D model the box yourself? I had no idea it was so colorful. Beautiful piece! \m/
I did, thank you. We didn't do a video of that process. We thought it might be a tad boring to watch. Glad you liked the project!
Wait ... which Star Wars was this in again?!?! This was great and enjoyed it a lot!
. . . the one with the sand ;)
Boom!
The battle damage really turned out nice. That intricate paint job is amazing. Do you seal it to preserve its beauty?
Thank you!! We hit it with a matte sealer yes.
You might want to try building the stump from Flash Gordon. You know, the one that has a creature that, if you are stung, causes madness.
Killer Candy, man!
Thanks Bro!
So I am currently trying to print a model myself, but I am trying to print it on my neptune 3 max which is an fdm style printer. I'm not exactly confident that it is going to print all the tiles and come out defect-free. Did you have any issues printing yours with supports falling off? Your print shown here looks flawless. Any tips and advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
BRIAN THOMPSON I'M STILL LMFAO YOU AND YOUR WIFE ARE BEYOND AWESOME. I LOVE DUNE TOO AND YOU GUYS ACTING OUT A SCENE WITH A COMICAL TWIST OF THE CLASSIC FILM WAS AWESOME.
Thank you!
The prop looks amazing in the model and the painting. The opener was great also. I am saddened tho at the lack of commitment to the bit that Carissa didn't shave her head.
LOL! Thanks Wayne!!! I will let her know!
That is by far the best version of the box I've seen. The Bene Gesserit's Reverend Mother would likely mistake this for real and have a serious problem sifting the humans from the animals. I've been looking all over for a finished (painted) prop of this magnitude but haven't found anyone willing to make or sell them. I see that your thing is for people to go out and build such a masterpiece, but for the less artistically inclined, like myself, I would waste a lot of time and money, ending up with an extremely sloppy mess that would cause more pain for me than the Gom Jabbar test itself. So, shot in the dark, would you be willing to recreate this and sell it? The cost would surely have to reflect the time and effort you both put into such a beautiful piece. I'm willing to pay a decent amount of Solaris (or USD) for your generosity and art. If not, no worries, I'm sure you are both busy and have many other projects to do.
Im ol' skool, I feel 3d printing is the lazy approach, FFwd to the end and it looks really cool
Interesting Doc. I don’t actually think of it as old school vs new school. It took me around 10 hours to 3D model the box. There is a fair amount of time spent getting the model right; size, proportions, etc. the. The process of printing the box was a lot of trial and error; fill, position, etc.
So I think what I’m saying is, there are different forms of “making” that go into things. If I had spent the same amount of time working a piece of MDF on a band saw or table saw, folks see that as “old school,” but because it was on a computer it’s not the same?
Plus all the weathering and painting was done traditionally.
All in all, I think there is value in the creative process no matter the format or medium 🤷♂️
Any chance we can get the files ??
They are available on our Patreon page for all Guild members. These files as well as all of our others.
If you like Dune,,, try to do next the gun voice sounds... that one look great....
It'd be cool to paint the inside with Vantablack or an equivalent super-black paint
indeed. I think Carissa was following the reference on this one, but the options are limitless!
Awesome, so glad to see it print so well in the end man and what a wonderful result, it was touch and go there right? Thanks for reaching out though, I feel honoured to have somehow helped the build LOL 👊👊
Thanks bro! Appreciate your help man, couldn't have pulled it off without you!
I Enjoy this video! 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿😁👍🏿
So glad to hear this, thank you!
awesome
Thank you!
hahahahaha great episode Brian !
Man, the Sardaukar scene at Salusa Secundus blew my mind.
soooo good!!!
[ throat singing I N T E N S I F I E S ]
"It is shocking to find how many people believe they can not learn, and how many more believe learning to be difficult."
AMEN!!!!
“…She turned it and Paul saw that one side was open-black and oddly frightening. No light penetrated that open blackness”. It would be great to use one of the “ultra-blacks” for the interior. It would not have the same satisfaction as candy, but candy is for humans who survive the test! Best to inspire fright before the test…
I love the Ultra-Black idea. I think we went with the film reference, but I love the book quote you pulled out. That's brilliant!
She’s here! She’s there! She’s every f*ing where! Roy Kent! Roy Kent!
LOL!!!! Yeah buddy!
Why didn't you apply some primer before the paint ? The paint will fall off as soon as you touch it without primer
I absolutely did apply primer. Paint has held up perfectly!
Funnily enough, "pain" in french means "bread", so I'll try to build this "pain box" replica to keep bread in it.
LOL!!! YES!
Until that post-closing clip I was afraid that Dune had taken someone over to the Dark Side.
LOL!!!
Great as always.
But I am realy sorry to tell you that , ye no it's absolutly not like that (Villeneuve name)
It shoud be in phonetic somthing close to : vil-nev
hmm . . . well, we gave it a shot.
Dune, where's my hand?
🤣🤣🤣 . . . 😳
When you have a 3d model and no 3d printer, pain.
Sorry about that.
Another idea: build the R2D2 unit from Family Guy Star Wars.
Nice weathering and distressing job, but I would have preferred if it wasn’t 3d printed. You could have built it up from styrene of different thicknesses or even wood. I watch this channel to get ideas on how to make something with nothing, not how to make something from a fully complete 3d printed model.
Consider this my friend. The medium of 3D modeling and the act of scratch building out of styrene or foam can be much the same.
It took a deal of creative time to model the box in a virtual world. I found it as much of a creative challenge to model the box, as if I had sculpted it out of foam or wood. I just used differ t skills.
Then learning the correct setting and. Such needed to get the box to print correct was also a learning curve.
The curing and finishing process was a new learning curve as well.
We provided physical battle damage to the box, hand painted each brick, and finished the overall appearance with hand dry brushing.
So I suppose what I’m saying in the end is this; we all have our approach of creation. We all have the medium we prefer. But is the act of “making” any less if you use one method over another? Are you less inspired because someone 3D models, prints, and paints than you are if they scratch build from foam or something else physical?
You might be, and that’s understandable, but for us it’s the act of using your imagination no matter the medium.
Agree Brian, being a 3D modeller myself it's as much an art form as anything else 👊 I totally loose myself in that process too!
Gnawing your own leg off when your caught in a NET is not conducive to escape ;)
I thought you were going to MAKE the box, not print off a copy of someone else's. Bummer.
This is not someone else’s, I 3D modeled it myself from start to finish. Then printed it. I then aged it, we painted it, and weathered it. I think you missed all of that . . . Bummer.
A disappointing video. How to build - 3D print it complete.
So what you are saying is that we should only ever scratch build projects? That by 3D printing we are not "making." That a project can not be called "how to" if you 3D print, laser, or CNC? . . . interesting. I disagree. But then we have learned that no matter the situation someone will undoubtably not enjoy the content, the project, or something in between.
@@TheSmugglersRoom I just feel the title was misleading. I use all of the technologies that you have mentioned, as well as scratch building. Perhaps if the title was more like "Making a pain box from Dune look good" Or "Finishing effects for a Dune pain box"
Consider this my friend. The medium of 3D modeling and the act of scratch building out of styrene or foam can be much the same.
It took a deal of creative time to model the box in a virtual world. I found it as much of a creative challenge to model the box, as if I had sculpted it out of foam or wood. I just used differ t skills.
Then learning the correct setting and. Such needed to get the box to print correct was also a learning curve.
The curing and finishing process was a new learning curve as well.
We provided physical battle damage to the box, hand painted each brick, and finished the overall appearance with hand dry brushing.
So I suppose what I’m saying in the end is this; we all have our approach of creation. We all have the medium we prefer. But is the act of “making” any less if you use one method over another? Are you less inspired because someone 3D models, prints, and paints than you are if they scratch build from foam or something else physical?
You might be, and that’s understandable, but for us it’s the act of using your imagination no matter the medium.
I'm not getting the issue with the 3D design I'm reading here, everyone has their preference if course but times a changing and computers don't just 'pop' a model into a existence, they have to be modelled and planned and that takes lots of work and skill 👊