Topic: Making Miniatures
I mentioned that I've investigated making my own miniatures, and at least one person has inquired into the results of that investigation. Rather than merely respond to his email over on the MJ12 yahoo list, I figured I'd post it here, which would end up there.....
First - you need a mold, to get the mold, you need a model. I made some out of sculpey, and they well and truly suxored...but they worked for learning how to cast things.
I made all my molds out of 100% GE Silicone caulk, straight from Walmart (I wish I was paid for each time I mention them to someone).
There's a method mentioned here:
http://forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/load/hypertufa/msg1217385422593.html
...basically, it involves mixing glycerin and latex paint to get the caulk to cure no matter how thick it's applied.
Do a Google search...
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=thin+silicone+caulk+mold
..and you get a lot more hits...
http://www.myheap.com/book/chapter-07/siliconecaulkmolds.php
.. is also pretty thorough.
I used water, soap, and mineral spirits (you should use some other solvent, trust me!) with some kitty litter in it. I used it because of my rather circuitous route to getting information. Seems that you have to do (had to, now I know the magic phrases to plug into Google) a lot of reading to get an idea as to how it cures, and I couldn't find glycerine ANYWHERE until I'd already done all this...
You can use something called Xylene to thin the caulk, it works better from what I'm told.
It did work, and I've got a brick of silicone caulk with some rather crappy little ship molds on one side to show for it. yeah me... "Proper" moldmaking Silicones can cost up to 100$ a gallon.
As to making ships:
I've actually tried a plaster mix, a cement mix, 'PVA Goop' (hey, I had a gallon of Elmer's and some unused "20 mule team Borax" sitting around sitting around...) and straight polyester resin.
The winner was polyester resin.
Dan, Jim, and a couple of other folks on this forum can attest to the crappy-ness of gypsum-cement mixes I used (and to my general lack of sculpting ability at this point). I understand that there are 'dental cements' that I could have used, but considering their cost, I saw that as a non-starter.
Polyester Resin is cheap (I can get a pint of it at Walmart for about 12 bucks), easy to find (eh..Walmart vs mail order), and is certainly strong enough unless you plan on using your little space ships at actual scale speeds.
Another neat thing I've not yet investigated is the use of fillers in Polyester resins. I'll try that at some future point, but I'm still shy a decent place to work and haven't the time at present. Once things settle down, I'll try to dork with it some.
I would suggest (and I'm planning on) investigating kitty litter (yes, KITTY LITTER) ground in a beat up old blender (certainly never use food in it again!) with a solvent compatible with the resin. Another thing that would be cheap is paper pulp in solvent. I don't know just how much fillers would weaken the miniature beyond use, but OTHER fillers are used in commercial products - so I'd have to play with it to see if it was workable. It may be more work than it's worth. Fillers only purpose is to extend your resin so that the miniature costs less in terms of resin.
Here's some more info on resin...
http://users.lmi.net/drewid/resin_faq.html
This guy is using 'proper casting silicone':
http://www.hirstarts.com/moldmake/moldmaking.html
You can use Styrene Monomer to thin resin, but it's pretty hazardous:
http://www.fiberglasssupply.com/Product_Catalog/Polyester_Resins/polyester_resins.html
..hope this helps, and I'd LOVE to hear if anyone else has tried casting there own...