I think some people forget that creators are real people too you know? I love your content especially when there are videos like these where we get to see a very genuine and raw moment 💖
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
I appreciate that!
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
My favorite author co-authors with a lot of other people who write under his online publishing company as well as many series under his own various pen names. He has comments that this helps keep him coming up with new ideas and the authors he works with also come up with new ideas. It's not subtractive. It's almost multiplicative. - So to drag my comment on topic with the video, sometimes you need to look around, talk to other makers, maybe talk to a kid and see what they would think is cool, or if you are part of one or more games, ask other players what they think would be cool to add to the props pile. And maybe these ideas help a GM come up with new encounter ideas, or the kid my start drawing fun art, or...
@tannerjohnson64366 сағат бұрын
"Running out of ideas isn't a permanent condition" is something I very much needed to hear today.
@dganim91962 сағат бұрын
Hey Jeremy, I've been 2d animating for nearly 30yrs now. Creative burn out is very real. I think you have done an excellent job bringing quality videos all these years. Thank you.
@LordRavensong11 сағат бұрын
Uploading this the day before the US election is fucking hilarious
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
I certainly had that thought too 😄
@IanBoyte10 сағат бұрын
Came to leave this comment 😅
@Azrael5610 сағат бұрын
In september a french lawyer (Juan Branco) publish a book to explain how to build a guillotine (a real one) to put in our garden to make government remember what could happen when people are angry^^
@WiseSageBum7 сағат бұрын
@@BlackMagicCraftOfficial I thought it was intentional 😂
@Zanibar7 сағат бұрын
@@IanBoyte Same here!
@allenmarsh27288 сағат бұрын
You're videos were the reason I started crafting terrain. When I'm feeling a block I just go back and look at a couple of your older videos and I usually have something click.
@fatrhino7 сағат бұрын
The guillotine is awesome man! What a great little piece of terrain.
@oakenhollowgames10313 сағат бұрын
We love ya too bud, and I honestly love smaller builds like this and miss seeing them. They’re fun, manageable and the reason I got into your stuff. Get rested and create at your own pace.
@IndigoWraithe9 сағат бұрын
7:51 OMG the fluffiest! lol. Great video as always. You are so right about the creative process. It's not always just inspiration or new, bold ideas. Sometimes, you just gotta make a thing and flex the muscle. Your guillotine came out great. A simple build that was well executed. Thanks for sharing!
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
Cat-based therapy can be very important. Why else would there be cat cafes in Japan?
@StevenRafael2689 сағат бұрын
Everyone needs a good "palette cleanser" project every once in a while 👍
@ChaseOrdonis11 сағат бұрын
This is so real. Even just a small doodle or a step in a lil project, or 1 sentence can keep those embers burning. Its hard to get the fire back going again when its been cold too long or soaked in a rain, I know. But its not impossible. Even looking back on your old work can inspire you again.
@captin314911 сағат бұрын
Very much so. I had a hard series of events in my life that left me off of creating for nearly ten years. Now that I'm getting back into it I find myself having to almost re-learn skills that I used to use effortlessly.
@ChaseOrdonis10 сағат бұрын
@captin3149 I'm proud of you!!
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
One time, to break out of a funk, I just made foam rocks as scatter terrain for a couple of hours. Anything from a rock that would provide partial cover to a platform where a party could fight a couple of giant spiders.
@ChaseOrdonis7 сағат бұрын
@MonkeyJedi99 rocks are great to zone out to, cause you can later combine w other rocks,make plateaus,cliffs or even add some green for a moss or magical covering later.
@DarkoStojanovickgkid11 сағат бұрын
Having a video with a small, easy to execute and inspirational idea like this one is refreshing! Thanks!
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
KZbin hobby videos have gotten out of hand
@decm3_72711 сағат бұрын
Haha easy to EXECUTE! I see what you did there
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
Not every build has to be a table-filling castle on a hill overlooking a farming town with a river and water wheel like some kind of Real Terrain (Hobbies)... Though those builds can be fun too!
@billhaigh31211 сағат бұрын
Whether you make a long video or a short video, they’re always awesome. Thank you!!
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@Kaiserland1118 сағат бұрын
Thanks for the great video! I just (in the last 3 weeks) got into DIY terrain crafting because I'm an avid wargamer and TTRPG player, and I LOVE your videos! I've come to appreciate you, Wyloch's Armory, and a few other DIY terrain builders for your creativity, crafting talent, and dedication to this community that I'm just starting to be a part of. I'm an engineer by trade so making terrain is not my day job, but it does support my hobbies; I credit my hobbies with improving or even starting some of my best relationships. My wife plays with me, I have 3 super close friends that I met through D&D, and my 3 brothers and I always get together when we can for some RPG campaign or Warhammer 40K. Normally I just buy terrain and paint it, but since discovering DIY terrain building I can't put it down! All that is to say, thank you for years of dedication to the craft and for providing me the resources I need to keep making memories with those I love using terrain that I made by hand.
@spoonz20211 сағат бұрын
Yea, I go through periods where i paint miniatures every single day for a month and months where i can't put brush to paint to save my life. Sometimes I need to wait until i get excited again and sometimes i just paint something I have no idea how to paint or that's totally outside my wheelhouse. The last option has lead to a lot of fun paints that I didn't expect to be fun.
@spoonz20211 сағат бұрын
also, i'm totally fine seeing videos of you making small things like this.
@TabletopBoi7 сағат бұрын
honestly this is exactly what I needed to hear! I kinda started this hobby because of your videos and I always thought it was insane that you had not run out of ideas and much respect to you for sharing that with us all. I honestly thought I was bad at it because I did run out of ideas, because all the best creators seemed to never run out of ideas. So, all that to say thanks I will go craft now!
@vercingetorix72111 сағат бұрын
I really like this approach to dealing with burnout, I will be sure to try this in the future. Great video, and a cool little piece of terrain! It would be cool to run a “save a pc from being executed” story!
@pez57679 сағат бұрын
Rad video! Both the build and the chat. Thank you for sharing your creativity!
@mtgemperor11 сағат бұрын
Don't worry about it, man. Sometimes, inspiration can come from the unlikeliest of places and sometimes, it just needs a little kickstart. If you need an extended break, take the time you need to replenish your mind and body. Pace yourself to keep your mind safe and sane. Don't be afraid to ask for help.
@Ravenkiwi7 сағат бұрын
I want to add on to what Jeremy said as well. As a Graphic Designer with over a decades worth of experience, we all hit a creative wall. No matter who you are, a creative block will rear itself and stagnate our minds. At that point you need to get up, take a break, and come back a little bit later. Over the past 17yrs working in the creative industries you learn ways to both identify when you start stagnating, and ways to deal with it. Getting up and going for a walk outside, and it can just be for 5mins, not long at all, is all that's sometimes needed. Watching and reading what other creatives are doing is another good source of inspiration. Having other hobbies, especially if this isn't your day job, is a good way to unwind too. Learn an instrument, learn to draw, learn to sculpt, learn anything else can help further your creative experience and get you out of that funk.
@JvdBos10 сағат бұрын
Good stuff, really 🙂 It's nice you're keeping it real by showing some of the parts we barely get to see on KZbin - the parts where inspiration slows down a bit. I'll always like your honesty and showing the whole creative process, 'warts and all'.
@sdchip8 сағат бұрын
As a different sort of creator, thank you for your message here- I definitely needed to hear it right now.
@wittlegoblinСағат бұрын
This is great. It's important we remember that what our "best" is changes day to day. Sometimes we did our best and it was an incredible day of building and making and working. Other days our best was to just get up and take care of ourselves. This guillotine is very cool, I hope you're resting up and feeling good!
@terrencemiltner100512 сағат бұрын
Thanks for pulling back the curtain. Yup cons are excellent but Con Drop is a real thing and you have found a fun way to get past it. Another thing I do after a con is look ahead to the next con/event a little or jot down what went well or didn't. No better time to update the packing list than when you get home after an event when you forgot your pens, glue, or dice.
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
Yup learned a lot in preparation for Adepticon!
@capnskustomworks7 сағат бұрын
Heck yes! A little creating goes a long way, and getting going is the hardest part!
@barrycarlafriesen78984 сағат бұрын
Your videos got me into crafting and it has been a blast. It was nice meeting you at Comicon and thanks for letting my daughter take our photo!
@flipgodsey633911 сағат бұрын
This was perfect! Also got me to thinking about war machines(ballistas, catapults etc.) Great work
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
A fist full of balsa beams and some thin string, and the castle walls are in danger!
@tanyagiannelli8439 минут бұрын
Since covid hit, I eagerly wait every Friday to see what your new video is about! I wish I could be more supportive because I truly love what you do, how you explain, your processes, your happy accidents, happy failures, how you solve problems, I like the fact that you are being you, Jeremy. This is the job that you choose, it's scary in many aspects, but your awesome at it! In my opinion, intelligent people understand that your intent is to always be 100% great in what you deliver to the public, but that is also normal to have down periods. Intelligent people would give you suggestions on how to overtake the down periods. Having a blank paper in front of you is always scary. Doddle! Doodle everyday, even if you dont want, and I assure you something will come up. The importance of building a guillotine is exactly this concept. I think you maybe need another theme, like you did in the past for the diverse way of building tiles or the modular buildings. maybe more interaction with your followers? Maybe more collaborations? More kitties, definitely more kitties shots! We love you Jeremy🍁
@ConoftheDead4 сағат бұрын
I’ve been video game designer for 25 years and I hear you on the creative idea lapses. I’ve had a bunch of these periods, but I had one a few years ago that was genuinely scary - I had gone from making note of new ideas on an almost daily basis to just a void of nothing for months on end. I honestly thought I was done. In the end it took doing just as you said, starting something (preferably only semi related to your main thing) anything to get things moving again. I appreciate you talking about it and letting people know they can push through it.
@johngraham241610 сағат бұрын
Been watching you for years and you’ve inspired some awesome tabletop builds that have created memories that my friends and I will always share. Thank you sir
@AnimationsCraftingMore4 сағат бұрын
I started watching your videos in 2018 I think and every time I watch one of your videos, I get inspired to start crafting. Also every time i see one of those mentos jars with that curve, I think of when you used one of those to create an acid container in one of your terrains a long time ago. You really inspire me and I love watching your videos after a long day to activate my other brainhalf. Thanks Love from The Netherlands
@matthewdbickel10 сағат бұрын
Dude, don't be so hard on yourself! I loved it, and enjoyed observing your tools and techniques with them. Helpful and inspiring for a amateur creator like myself. Cheers!
@mauricioduran3369Сағат бұрын
Hope everything went well in comic-con and that you get your well deserved rest. Best of luck and wishes mate and thanks for the video!
@clayjee8 сағат бұрын
Awesome. This was exactly the reminder that I needed to hit the reset button on my own process right now. Love it!
@thalesandretta50179 сағат бұрын
Love from Brazil. You made me go into DM'ing and making minis and crafting, even with less resources. Thank you for all the inspiration!
@ryanschenk29468 сағат бұрын
Just wanna say I appreciate the hell out of you. I have been struggling for a few weeks now to even start working on a build for my adventure, and I thought stepping away from it for a bit was the answer. I don't know why I didn't think about just building something random and completely unrelated to my adventure to get back into it but that sounds fun as hell. I'm hoping that maybe it will help me feel motivated to start creating again if I can get back to the fun stuff.
@Yassadar857 сағат бұрын
You do such a great work and my kids and I love your work. It is importent to take a rest... free the mind and get ready with new inspire and some new motivation... and the importents part of all this is your joy and happyness with the project. Doesn´t matter how huge or unique.
@mythradites5098 сағат бұрын
I love the videos. You hit the nail on the head. As a commission artist I am constantly painting and building things that aren't mine. Sure I get to exchange those completed models for $$$ but it still feels draining. Sending something out as a piece of me. There is only so much I can give. You need to set time aside for yourself. Your own goals. Your own models! Building to build is a great way to "cleanse the pallet" so to speak. I made a goal to build something for myself once a month. While I haven't really been able to keep that tempo, I still find time to do things outside of modeling to retain sanity. I volunteer at a museum on the weekends as a nice change of pace from my day to day painting.
@ianclaydon80399 сағат бұрын
Thank you for the content. You must look after yourself. Look forward to seeing you again when you have rested. Thanks
@SeorkMaxx6 сағат бұрын
I don’t build small, I build large, for real people, but I relax watching you guys build small awesome builds. Wish I could build as fast 😁 But yes, we all run out of ideas sometimes and we all need to get out of it. Keep on going❤
@dannyakins76774 сағат бұрын
Don't beat yourself up! My greatest artistic work is a paper mashae mountain that I finished with canned spray paint & cotton wool balls for snow.. However, years later I still love watching your amazing work!!
@justinleesmith6 сағат бұрын
Makes sense and like you said, it's to be expected. Reminds me of Matt Colville in the TTRPG space and his response when people ask why there are fewer Running the Game videos these days. His response (roughly) "I did that, I've taught people how to run the game; new videos will come at the same cadence as ever, when I have a new idea." Personally, I've really enjoyed seeing your exploration into new projects--from the huge tower to making your own game to music production.
@StevenRafael2689 сағат бұрын
Dont pay any mind to those haters! You're doing great man! keep up the great creativity and passion :) happens to the best of us.
@donutrock21328 сағат бұрын
I am currently out of my creative arc. I have just been gaming. I still watch your videos waiting for the crafty creative spark to return.
@JustQuixa10 сағат бұрын
Everyone needs and deserves rest and vacation time from their jobs, creative/artists included! I think some people don't realize how it can tax the mind to keep coming up with fresh content for everyeone else to mindlessly consume within comparative moments on a regular basis. Thanks for all the years of awesome content and hope you take good solid care of your brain's health!
@sarahrathbone5612 сағат бұрын
Just what I needed to hear about now. Thank you
@drewwendell9 сағат бұрын
People forget that most of us craft to need: we have a game we're running, we need an [X] for our game and so we try to build it. Our "job" is to run the game, the crafting is how we execute it. Crafting just to craft can be brutal because there is an entire universe of things to choose from with very little to distill down the options. This, and most crafting channels are at their best when the creators have a specific need in mind, but when the "job" has moved from building narratives then crafting to just building to build, burnout is a real danger.
@TrueMiz8 сағат бұрын
This video makes me think back on a comment I left, and by what you're saying, makes me think I came off wrong/didn't gwt my main point across. I apologize, I'm direct, but that doesn't mean I'm always *clear.* A while back, I left a comment about how I *hated* the multiple videos in a row of the same thing. (The flex foam road/river/etc.) I apologize if it seemed like I was insulting you with my previous comments. And I will say what I *meant* to get across. You're absolutely right! You should be taking breaks, and it's absolutely okay to run out of ideas. Trying new things, taking breaks, and doing weird projects that are one off, are all parts of growing, and being in the hobby!
@Kiddarri17297 сағат бұрын
I totally get this feeling, I've been a TTRPGer for many many moons, writing most if not all of my modules, campaign settings and stuff, also i love drawing. Sometimes you sit and stare at the paper and you don't see anything, sometimes you stare at the paper and you cant get whats in your head on the paper and that's ok, sometimes you need a break a switch of gears or some new inspiation. Get some rest, kick your feet up heck give them a warm water and Epsom salt soak and breath ideas will come in time to quote Miracle Max from Princess Bride,"You rush a miracle man, you get rotten miracles." creating is the same you rush it it often comes out not as planned. Always enjoying your craft and videos 👍🏾💪🏾
@Maartje1178 сағат бұрын
OMG I love the old timey aesthetic in the video 😲
@mevl482211 сағат бұрын
L-i-n-o cuts, as a traditional artist. Glad to see you guys getting in to it. The matrix you are cutting is called linoleum...same thing as flooring.
@Nbrobst9 сағат бұрын
Hell yeah man! I'm about to get started on a painting!
@coryway69518 сағат бұрын
100% going to make one soon. Great suggestion.
@TasareAlda10 сағат бұрын
This was a a lovely video and was a good kick in the butt to go make something, even if its kinda blah. Thanks
@stephen65032 сағат бұрын
thank you for showing the uninspired, tired, unmotivated, worn out, not excited, HUMAN side of the creative space/hobby. Sometimes just doing SOMETHING even if it is something youve done once or a hundred times before is enough to get you back into the swing of things. It stirs up something inside. Like jumper cables to a car battery that on any other day would know how to start the vehicle on its own. Sometimes we need to be reminded how difficult it can be to keep moving as creatives. It's normal but not glamorous so doesnt get shown off as much as the colorful, vivid, unique, bright, and enlightened things we make and share. Out of sight out of mind right? Maybe more creatives should show this side of whatever hobby they are part of. So those of us who are new, or not quite as talented or experienced dont feel like were alone when we too go through it. Making any hobby more approachable and understandable sometimes means showing the occasional bumps in the road. Thanks for being real and honest. It's also inspiring in its own right to see you put out something consistently even when you are stumped.
@centerededgedesignusa795710 сағат бұрын
Thank you! Every moment of every day is not going to be inspired, and that's GOOD! We would never be able to execute every inspired idea if we were having new ones ALL THE TIME! We need time to clean the brushes, shop for new supplies, go to Cons and just nerd out, or be in a booth and show our work to others! And when you don't have 'the energy', find a way to get started, and the energy will come! ALSO: you never know when you're going to stumble on a 'hit'. Look at the albums of your favorite bands. Not everything is a hit, but it shows that they SHOWED UP, and DID THE WORK. You never know what is going to come from your work when you start, but you have to DO IT to find out. :)
@squintsyadams846312 сағат бұрын
Love it. I also appreciate the candor. You're a real one.
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial12 сағат бұрын
I appreciate that
@D13Hobbies4 сағат бұрын
I feel you man. See you next week.
@bradley84188 сағат бұрын
Not sure if you’ve heard of it or not but the miniature agnostic skirmish game called “1490 Doom” might be something right up your alley. Encourages kit bashing and terrain building in a relatively small space. It’s An alternative history apocalyptic setting in the 1490s where climbing high and not falling while avoiding a toxic atmosphere and clashing with rival war bands to secure objectives is the name of the game. I haven’t played yet but looks awesome and relatively new. The creators have a small KZbin channel demoing the rules and setup and will pop up if you search 1490doom. Trench Crusade now on kickstarter would be another I could see you coming up with great ideas for.
@mcd644Сағат бұрын
Dude this is still a sick project 👍👍 thanks for the inspiration to make some smaller set piece’s.
@AndreSjoberg4 сағат бұрын
Such a good video :) Having «worked creatively» for almost 40 years (making a lego/meccano cable cart at age 10 counts right?) having those iterative periodes where you refine and iterate and develope variations of stuff until the next «big leap» is such a big part of the creative process as a whole, which most people *not* doing creative work are unaware of. The «big ideas» are few and and spaced out usually. Especially when somebody discovers somebody new, and all the stuff they see from that person is cool and great, and then after a while they see the iterations and go «nah, they’ve lost the knack for it now», totally misunderstanding how things work in the world of making stuff. Videos like this help rectify that, so thank you :)
@fightingcorsair72979 сағат бұрын
I feel your pain. I have been in the graphic design industry for 30 years. My colleagues and I hit burnout all the time.
@douggillespie7476 сағат бұрын
Sometimes you have to come back around too, found a better method or quick way to do a project. Keep up the great work brother
@Alohadungeoncrawl10 сағат бұрын
Great video and even greater advice
@stefankuchmeister18759 сағат бұрын
Nice! I did a gallows once, just because. I truly think little side projects are needed once in a while.
@CajunCraft246 сағат бұрын
It came out great!
@nerdfatha11 сағат бұрын
First, fantastic guillotine! Also, your stack of VHS players reminds me if an old vhs pirate operation I saw back in the day, lol. And, while I know you are super practiced at it after 10 years of videos, every choice you made, from camera angles to set up is a creative choice. Still a great video. What may feel like a slump or blick for you is still wildly more creative than 90% of the population.
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
I absolutely do NOT have a side operation as a VHS pirate 👀
@DragovianMaster12 сағат бұрын
Loved the idea! How about some traps building in the future?
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial12 сағат бұрын
Been a long time since I made some traps!
@Sqalman8 сағат бұрын
Rest up and keep up the good work later!
@garybuettner79204 сағат бұрын
Nice to know other creators sometimes hit a wall. I’m a writer and I do crafts and make things to recharge that battery.
@danielsmeds956310 сағат бұрын
Comment for the algorthim! But also, I don't think you necessary have to assume that all your viewers are crafter. Some of us just like to watch like to watch a highly skilled professional making things ;) However, recently I started to make my own Swedish rural/mountain village in wood!
@jettyswagger115511 сағат бұрын
an interesting idea for coming up with projects to work on, is have your patreon subscribers come up with ideas and have them submit the ideas. you can print them off and put them in a bowl, and choose an idea t random. Kinda like picking a name from a hat. but instead it could be a simple project like crafting terrain furniture, or maybe a specific type of building.
@ryansullivan58548 сағат бұрын
Wow - that escalated quickly with the blood effect!
@TabletopWitchCRAFT11 сағат бұрын
Great video... music was on point too man! Rest up!
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial11 сағат бұрын
Thanks man
@tinaprice49486 сағат бұрын
Even though you are in a rut, you did the guillotine sooo much better. :D It's ok to feel down sometimes or just blah cause when you are on the up swing it makes it feel that much better :D
@sbalmer196711 сағат бұрын
More cat content please. Kitty!
@stephenmartin198210 сағат бұрын
Sometimes you just have to take a few small steps. It's how we lead up to a large leap. Also after seeing this I got an idea that may be worth sharing. What about a jousting field? Complete with bunting flags and spectator stands. I don't think anyone on KZbin has done that yet
@damiensteinrich967712 сағат бұрын
Yay first! I love your stuff!
@damiensteinrich967712 сағат бұрын
I don't count the spam bots comment
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial12 сағат бұрын
@@damiensteinrich9677 Nor should you
@sirguy66786 сағат бұрын
Really cool!
@DyingtoPaint8 сағат бұрын
I lean really hard into one aesthetic (black metal, skellies, grimdark gaming, etc.) It can turn into white noise after a while. If you take a break with something different (other genres of music, a film you wouldn’t usually watch) as a reset, you can come back with a fresh view of things. Also, who is the fluffy guy?!!! And why have you been keeping him from us?!!!!
@TAB_10010 сағат бұрын
the music in your video reminded me of another song and I spent about an hour looking for the song Varend Volk - This Night We Spend Ashore (maybe it will help someone else)
@Catsmeow65911 сағат бұрын
I’ve never been to a Comic-Con (stop throwing rotten veggies!). I’ve been to some pet expos and I use to be a vendor At various marketplaces for my portraiture business so I get how things like that can be a complete drain on the brain! I keep a book where I write down ideas that pop into my head, so when I get the feeling of being drained, I pull out the book and pick something to experiment with. I use one of those note books that’s divided in sections, so if I need to expand on an idea I jot/draw follow-up idea in the follow up section. Number your ideas and put the number at the top of the pages that relate to it…. Sorry, I’m in a rambling mood so this all may not make sense. But I hope it helps someone else that gets the creative blank stare after events.
@cluelesscraftsman6 сағат бұрын
March time I unexpectedly went into hospital for a short time. Since then I have yet to get back into the mind set to want to create TikTok videos again. I can’t get over the hill to want to sit down and record, and that’s before I even try to come up with ideas.
@Valllentine12 сағат бұрын
I think it'd be a good idea to explore the idea of making special characters for Idols of Torment, maybe something like the Primarchs or Chaos Gods from Warhammer. Maybe not as strong because it's not the same scale but I think it'd be cool, like angel and devils or something
@AndarPrimulon8 сағат бұрын
Sick Kef speakers 🔊
@4362mont12 сағат бұрын
Project looks like a pain in the neck.
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial12 сағат бұрын
Lol
@truegunpla5 сағат бұрын
love this video also we have a similar VCR setup
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial4 сағат бұрын
You make customs?
@truegunpla4 сағат бұрын
@ mainly glitching and video mixing for artists, been thinking about making customs lately tho
@wookiejesusofnazarethkashy194011 сағат бұрын
I do action figure props and dioramas and sell them on ebay. Couldn’t get inspired on my next dio after 2 weeks I decided to just make some crates while waiting for my next inspiration to come along. I might just scale this up and see how it goes. Never considered doing a 1/12 scale guillotine. Time to get out the proxon.
@Merrymushroom77711 сағат бұрын
I had so many ideas for halloween and now that its over i have no idea what to do next 🙃
@lotharrenz462111 сағат бұрын
well, heads' off to this message. someone should teach them a lesson about keeping your tools pristine... flies in the mechanism are no joke to deal with. ;)
@perrygrosshans853710 сағат бұрын
"Whoopdeedoodledandy a guillotine, who gives a shit?" I do! I do! That looked pretty cool. I particularly enjoyed how you made it go from "fancy French revolution" guillotine, to "slasher horror" guillotine. :D Also, who the hell can spell guillotine without spellcheck, gadzooks! :D Hope you had a great ComicCon!
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial10 сағат бұрын
There are a bunch of words that I can never learn to spell no matter how many times I do it (Medieval is a great example) but for some reason I can always do guillotine despite my dyslexia. No idea why.
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
During the (edit: first part of the) build, I kept expecting to hear Johnny Cash coming in with some lyrics.
@trisbane408625 минут бұрын
Hey, really awesome build, and a fantastic message! I think everyone needs to hear it's okay to be in a "slump" so long as you keep moving and don't give up. I did have a question, if you could answer.. what is that blood gore texture stuff you used at 8:38? I would really appreciate it if you could let me know. Thanks!
@BlackMagicCraftOfficial8 минут бұрын
Dirty Down Gore from Goblins Hut
@mattaffenit98982 сағат бұрын
Awwwwww fluffy kitty.
@patrickrohde92462 сағат бұрын
Would love to see your take on a Gundam diorama in a future video.
@danielcarriere604314 минут бұрын
Love this video…🤓
@MonkeyJedi997 сағат бұрын
The bit at around 1:38 is kind of like "Free your mind and your *** will follow." (by Funkadelic, 1970)
@MichaelBostetter3 сағат бұрын
In Pathfinder theres a realm called Gault, which is like if France never stabilized after the revolution. They have a guillotine in the center of every town. Maybe some gritty cityscape terrain?
@Bluecho43 сағат бұрын
"Flash, slash, glisten and gash She will ravesh you, Madame Guillotine Slit, Madame just bit Give her more to bite, she's a hungry queen Zing, savor the sting As she severs you, Madame Guillotine Slice, come paradise Hail her majesty Madame Guillotine" -The Scarlet Pimpernel Musical, "Madame Guillotine"