And that's why I have so much random garbage in my collection.
I don't mean 'garbage' as in things of little worth, I mean garbage, detritus that sane people throw away because it has no real purpose or value. Many modelers (especially those who build terrain,) begin to collect and hoard weird looking bits for use in a project.
Sometimes you find something and say "wow! that's just what I need to complete my project." But all too often, what we actually say is "wow! that thing looks cool, I will hold on to it in the vain hope that one day I will undertake some project that might utilize that piece."
And so it goes into your 'bitz box,' a term that comes from the fine folks at Games Workshop, about whom there enough opinions, and I can add nothing useful. More likely, you may end up putting it into one of several bitz boxes, both because you subdivide them by topic (mini pieces from sprues, extra vehicle parts, or terrain elements,) and because you accumulate so much over time.
You might even have to start sorting out your bits into little drawers... |
Of course, the first rule of modeling is to never throw anything away. When you have a model kit, wheher it be a model of the U.S.S. Nimitz or a unit of Catachan Jungle Fighters, the box comes with more pieces than you are likely to use. Aircraft models, for example, usually have options for building them with landing gear extended or retracted. If you build it retracted, so that you can hang the model for display as if in flight, you have some very useful landing gear pieces leftover. Miniature kits will inevitably leave you with extra heads, arms and accessories that can be used again in the future.
But then there are things that were never meant to be used in modeling. Things all around you can be pur to a new use (think of it as recycling,) simply by looking at them in a new way. That is the real trick; being able to look at a single object and run through multiple permutations of how it might look in a different context.
Is this just a cap from a tube of toothpaste? |
Or is it merely waiting for a quick coat of silver paint and some scrap paper to become a trashcan? |
Now to be sure, you needn't ever collect such things; the internet is vast, my children, and there are manufacturers out there that have cast nearly anything you can imagine in lead, pewter or resin. And if you are able to pay their price (pretty much never cheap,) you can have all the sci-fi control panels and generators, modern era furnishings and soda machines, or stone altars and dungeon grates for fantasy games that your heart could ever desire.
But for those with vision, those with creativity, and for those with children and tight budgets, there is the fine art of making your own stuff. But to do that, you need raw materials.
This means keeping your eyes open. Hardware stores are a great source of bitz (other terms for pieces that are there to make a model look good are gubbins, greeblies and mulch.) washers, odd nuts and flanges (heh heh, he said 'flanges,') can all be used to create just the look you are going for, especially of you are going for a sci-fi piece. We always expect sci-fi or other high tech setting pieces to have lots of doodads all over it, so slapping a small round washer here and there, or a section of grating made of window screen can go a long way.
Likewise craft stores can be treasure troves of bits. If you have not been to a craft store to check out what they have in the bead section these day, you really should. I picked up a multipack of round wooden beads of various sizes, and have put them to use as everything from the globes on a street light to the eyes of a shoggoth. My next plan is to use the larger ones to make eyebots and Mister Handy robots from Fallout. Even decorative buttons from the fabric section can sometimes be a great addition to any project, either as wheels, shields, or even wall decorations.
I made this awesome vault door/airlock door out of some old bases to a board game and a container of ...the type of medication some women take on a monthly basis. But it looked cool! |
Pretty soon you are looking at things and just waiting for them to become garbage so that you can scavenge them for parts.
So do not feel ashamed or alone, brothers and sisters, just get yourself some sterilite plastic shoeboxes. and remember the modeler's mantra:
"It's not what it is, it's what it could be."
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