I'm looking forward to produce some great scenes, but i want to know from the professionals how to make it. Cause sometimes i create it very Chunky and sometimes it is not deep enough. I will really love your help. Is there any good recipe i'm losing?
Also this week ill have untill this friday 50% off in my WAM store, so go check it and enjoy it! The time is running!
As was debated in some depth not long ago, gunge and slime are two completely different things.
Gunge should be a smooth and reasonably flowing "thick liquid", much like custard or golden syrup. It pours smoothly and comes in a variety of colours. It has very little taste or smell, and is the stuff you commonly see used on TV show gunge tanks like the one in Noel's House Party. You usually buy it from various suppliers as powder and then make it up by mixing it with warm water in buckets, though ready-mixed is also an option.
Slime on the other hand should be lumpy and unpleasant, usually smelly, and completely opaque. It's intended to be a humiating punishment or penalty.
In both cases though deeper is better, it just costs a lot more to fill say a paddling pool than it does to fill a few buckets.
DungeonMasterOne said: As was debated in some depth not long ago, gunge and slime are two completely different things.
Gunge should be a smooth and reasonably flowing "thick liquid", much like custard or golden syrup. It pours smoothly and comes in a variety of colours. It has very little taste or smell, and is the stuff you commonly see used on TV show gunge tanks like the one in Noel's House Party. You usually buy it from various suppliers as powder and then make it up by mixing it with warm water in buckets, though ready-mixed is also an option.
Slime on the other hand should be lumpy and unpleasant, usually smelly, and completely opaque. It's intended to be a humiating punishment or penalty.
In both cases though deeper is better, it just costs a lot more to fill say a paddling pool than it does to fill a few buckets.
Gunge? 3/4 of a pint of powder, pour slowly into a bucket of hot water while mixing it with a paint-mixer attachment on an electric drill. Keep mixing till all the powder is in then keep going until the mix starts to thicken - you can tell it's thickening because you can run the drill faster without anything splashing over the side of the bucket.
Allow 5 minutes per bucket.
Don't use water hotter than you can hold your hand under. Scalded models is not in anyone's interest.