Friday, October 30, 2020

Fairie Under Glass

 This artfully preserved fae specimen comes to us from E.J. Shindler. 


 

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Skull of Cthulhu

I know this Cthulhu skull makes no anatomical sense, but it's still hella cool.  Sculpted by artist James Ryman for giftware manufacturer Nemesis Now.


 

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Dem Bones

 These creepy bone reliquaries come to us from artist Ugo Serrano.


 

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

ATMOM Package Update

It's dim, plain, and grainy, but I was overjoyed to find this picture in my email today.  These are the 4" laptop stickers for the ATMOM package.  The company has a "Shipping Cam" that takes a shot of every order before it's posted off.

Everything is now in transit.  I'll have more stuff to show off soon.

 


 

Three Heads Are Better Than One

This trio of traditional sideshow-style shrunken heads come to us from Umbratheca.  I was surprised to learn these gaffs have become a controversial example of colonialist cultural appropriation.  I can see that argument in reference to actual human heads, but I'm not convinced it applies to fakes.


 

Monday, October 26, 2020

A Bevy of Blades

Sander Propworx returns to our pages with this collection of LARP weaponry.  It's amazing how far we've come from the days of boffer blades.


 

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Treasure! Part II

Full Disclosure: I'm using Amazon affiliate links in this post.  It doesn't cost you anything, and I get a commission from any sale.  So buy lots and lots of stuff so I can get some more loot for the treasure chest.

I've picked up some more gold coins for my prop treasure stash

The latest addition is a set of 100 replica Spanish doubloons from Leib Games.  It retails for $38.98 on Amazon, but the listing has a perpetual 15% off coupon that brings the final price down to $33.14.  I'm pretty sure Leib Games aren't the actual manufacturer, since they appear to be a game distributor. 


The coins are brass plated, die-struck zinc and 1.18" in diameter, just a smidge smaller than a US fifty cent piece.  The set includes a faux-suede pouch with a sateen drawstring.  Nothing fancy, but it does the job.


The coins are great.  They have a good heft, one of the main attractions of metal over plastic coins.  As you can see below, they're appreciably larger than the Beverly Oaks replica doubloons, which are around the size of a quarter.  The detail of the die struck design is notably cruder on the larger coins.


All and all, I prefer the Leib Games coins to the Beverly Oaks doubloons.  Weirdly, the larger coins are actually slightly cheaper on a per piece basis.  That said, they're still expensive.  Even at a discounted $33 a pop you're laying out some significant scratch to get a few hundred coins.

To be honest, I bought this set because I had a $10 Amazon Gift Card burning a hole in my pocket.  As nice as these coins are I don't see myself buying more without another gift card to defray the cost.

 Up next, we'll go beyond replica doubloons to a set of surprisingly affordable fantasy coins.


Cthulhu Fhtagn! Whistlecraft Edition.

This wonderfully stylized Cthulhu idol comes to us from artist Bruce Whistlecraft.  I'm not quite sure how to describe its aesthetic.  Art Nouveau?  Mythos Modernist?


 

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Cyclopean Beast

 The talented Karen Main returns to our pages with this cyclopean beast.


 

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Leather Grimoire

This well done grimoire comes to us from Velimira Designs.  Featuring a hand tooled leather cover and bird skull embossment.


 

Monday, October 19, 2020

Fus Ro Dah!

This awesome recreation of the Nordic Carved Armor from Skyrim comes to us from Talon's Cosplay Crusade.


 

Friday, October 16, 2020

A Mysterious Package

Marc Hunter brings us a look at the contents of the "Crate of Cthulhu" offering from the Mysterious Package Company.  What a wonderful collection of artifacts and ephemera.


 

Thursday, October 15, 2020

American Made

In the wizarding world European wand makers like Olivander's have traditionally dominated the market.  But times are changing, as Rushing's Rarities demonstrates with his display of American made wands.  It features this apple wood wand with a core of jackalope antler, a magical material only found in North America.


 

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Viking Shield

 This beautiful hand-carved viking shield, complete with a custom etched boss, comes to us from Kanut Wood Creations. 


 

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

The Horde

The appropriately named Russian LARP account brings us this horde of giant chaos creatures.  Just look at those costumes.

Update:  A commenter pointed out these are actually undead creatures, not chaos spawn.




 

Monday, October 12, 2020

Tome of the Pentacle

The gifted Alex Libris returns to our pages with his latest work.  This pentacle journal features a hand-tooled leather cover, brass hardware, and a custom embossment.


 

Saturday, October 10, 2020

Treasure!

After a long absence, I've slowly been getting back into traditional fantasy tabletop roleplaying.  And by "long", I mean it's been decades.  The last time I delved a dungeon Ronald Reagan was still president and 2nd Edition Dungeons & Dragons was just a rumor.

It should come as no surprise that I like to run a prop-heavy game.  Part of that includes having actual treasure to hand out.  I could wax poetic about using a multi-sensory approach to encourage immersiveness at the gaming table, but the truth is I love loot.  Gold!  Silver!  Jewels!  Sign me up.

The explosion in the number of companies offering fantasy coin sets demonstrates I'm not alone in that feeling.  Unfortunately, those coins have some problems.

The first is their astronomical price.  If you want a real hoard filled with piles of gleaming coins it's going to cost you hundreds of dollars.  That's just the nature of the beast.  Fantasy coins are a luxury product, and custom metal casting isn't cheap.

The second is aesthetic.  Most of the coins currently on the market have modern design sensibilities, with clean lines, neat layouts, and, worst of all, contemporary fonts and numbers.  They can be beautiful pieces of art, but they're essentially gaming tokens. 

That's not what I'm looking for.  I want loot that could actually pass as something found inside a long-mouldering dungeon.   In a perfect world I win the lottery and could buy up actual hoards of ancient coins.  Sadly, that day has not arrived.  In the meantime, this is what I've been using.

For the stuff available from Amazon I've included affiliate links.  Click through and I get a commission to help fund my prop-buying at no cost to you.

The treasure chest where I stash my loot.  I picked this up a couple of years ago on Amazon for a pirate-themed birthday party.  At the time I think I payed around $25 for it.  Unfortunately, the box doesn't seem to be available anymore, which is a damn shame.  It's 8" wide by 6" tall and 6" deep, made of stained rubberwood, and adorned with stamped steel pressings.  The chest is solidly made, and came with the padlock and two keys.

The lock looks the part and the mechanism works. It's cheap steel, so as soon as the paint rubs away it's going to start rusting.  Not necessarily a bad thing if you like that look.

Keys are awesome plot drivers.  For every key, there is a lock, and something valuable enough to need protection.  Give players a key and they won't quit poking around until they find the lock it fits.  That admittedly manipulative approach engages players even more when you're using physical props.  

Just look at that sweet loot!  Gold, silver, rings, and jewels.

For gold coins I'm using these Spanish doubloon replicas from Beverly Oaks.  They're made from brass plated zinc, around 3/4" in diameter (the size of a quarter), and and have the rough, hand-struck look I like.  At $18.95 for 50 each coin costs around 38 cents.  That's about the best price you can find for metal coins.  If you don't mind plastic you can spend a whole lot less.  These "Ancient Pirate Coins" look decent, measure a hefty 1 1/2' in size, and are a steal at just 8 cents apiece.

I like metal coins for two reasons.  One is the sound.  There's nothing like the clink of metal coins running through your fingers, or the distinctive thump of a leather money pouch dropping onto a tabletop.  The second is weight.  You don't really appreciate just how much treasure weighs until you're carrying a pouch filled with 300 "gold" coins.  And that's fake gold made of zinc.  The real stuff would weigh over 2.5 times as much.  

For silver coins I'm using the Viking Mix from Alpha Officium that I picked up years ago for the Viking Mythos Project.  They specialize in hand-struck pewter reproductions of historic coins for the reenactor/historian/SCA crowd.  The Viking Mix reproduces the coins found in documented hoards and includes 25 Omayyad Dynasty Dirhems, 25 Viking York coins, 25 Cnut Coins, 25 Eric Blood Axe coins, and 25 Tenth Century Saxon coins.  

If I was starting from scratch I would pick up the mix of gold and silver doubloons from Beverly Oaks.  It's the exact same die they use for the gold coins above, but with a mix of pure and "aged" gold and silver coins.  The per coin cost is around 26 cents, significantly cheaper than the all gold set they sell.  Based on the reviews there's a reason for that- a preponderance of the tarnished coins, which I suspect are seconds.

Ah, the simple joys of looting bodies.  I wanted rings for treasure stashes, both as magic items and sellable spoils.  I was pleasantly surprised to learn buying dozens of them at once is perfectly normal.  Amazon is filled with sets of "stackable" or "bohemian" rings, because wearing multiple bands on every finger is actually a thing.

I picked up a "Vintage Knuckle Ring Set" and this is less than half of what was included.  Fine jewelry?  Not at this price.  The rings are pot metal and faux stones.  That said, you get close to fifty of them and their designs, particularly things like the curling tentacle, lend themselves to repurposing as magical rings.

Finally, we come to the jewels.  Acrylic gems are dirt cheap thanks to their popularity as table decorations for wedding receptions.  Unfortunately, they don't clink. That seems like a small thing, but it's the reason I wanted cut glass or crystal gems.  Little did I know how aggravating that desire would become.

Cut glass gems are almost impossible to find.  A few Chinese companies have them, but you have to order pallet sized loads.  Nearly all the worlds production of three dimensional cut or cast glass stones ends up as decorative rhinestones.  The problem there is the reflective metal layer added by manufacturers so the stones will sparkle.

I can hear you asking the obvious question.  Why not just remove the backing?

Exactly my thinking, friends.  That's why I ordered these Glass Diamante Faceted Rhinestones from Amazon.  I was overjoyed when they arrived.  They look absolutely perfect, and all I had to do was strip off the metal.  Easy, right?  I Googled "removing metal backing from rhinestones" and had plenty of helpful answers.

Except none of them worked.

Vinegar and salt?  Nope.

Alcohol?  Nope.

Acetone?  Nope.

Brake fluid?  Nope.

PineSol?  Nope.

It turns out all of those techniques only work on rhinestones with a thin layer of metal foil glued to the back of the stone.   My stones had a layer of vacuum deposited aluminum.  The stones were put into a vacuum chamber, given an electric charge, and then a cloud of vaporized aluminum was released, electrostatically attaching itself to the glass. It's the same technique used to produce most mirrors.

The only way to get rid of the backing would be to dissolve the aluminum.

Before I tell you how to do that I want to emphasize something:

IF YOU DO THIS YOU WILL KILL EVERYONE IN YOUR HOME.  THE FUMES ARE TOXIC AND CORROSIVE.

Make sure the area is well ventilated and away from people and pets. Put the rhinestones in a non-reactive plastic container with a lid.  I used a recycled cold-cut tub.

Using a measuring cup, make a solution of 50% warm water and 50% household bleach by volume.  Make sure there's enough to totally cover the stones.  Pour the solution into the container and loosely place the lid on top.  Do not seal the container.  

Stay away for 24 hours.  Once that time has elapsed, check to see if the aluminum has dissolved.  If there's still metal clinging to the glass carefully pour the liquid out into a sink and use copious amounts of water to wash it away.  Add another batch of the 50/50 water/bleach solution to the container, stir with a non-reactive or disposable stick, put the lid on loosely, and leave it alone for another 24 hours.

Repeat until the metal is gone.  Dump out the final batch of solution into the sink, wash it way with lots of warm water, and then thoroughly rinse the container and gems with warm water.

Enjoy your beautiful, sparkly, glass jewels. 


Friday, October 9, 2020

Cthulhu Fhtagn! Takaki Edition.

This beautiful Cthulhu idol comes to us from Japanese sculptor Akinori Takaki.  Click through to check out the full gallery, including a better look at the wonderful texture work.


 


 

Thursday, October 8, 2020

The White Wand

 This custom wizard's wand comes to us from Marvelowls.  Crafted from hornbeam and black onyx.


 

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Mummified Menagerie

The gifted Tom Kuebler returns to our pages with this collection of mummified creatures.  From left to right, a goblin, witchdoctor's familiar, and a troll.


 

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

"The Things Below" Prop Journal

 This project from artist Fred Burdy is amazing.   

This was a storytelling experiment, in the creation of a prop that tells the story and is part of it too. The pages were created in 2D, then print, anged and bound in a leather journal. Many secondary props (maps, train and boat tickets, a full American Passport) were similarly digitally created, then printed and aged. A small amulet was created in polymer clay. Lastly, a coin from 1920 is in only real element of this prop!

The amount of work that went into "The Things Below", from developing the narrative for the journal to producing all the included ephemera, is just stunning.  You really need to click through and check out the full gallery of images to appreciate it.



Monday, October 5, 2020

Great Cthulhu

Russian sculptor Sergey Belov brings us this work in progress Cthulhu idol.  It's a unique take on the traditional approach, and that's saying something.



 

Friday, October 2, 2020

Bottled Mandrake Root

 This is my favorite time of year.  I have fond memories of visiting my grandmother's house as she canned the huge amount of produce she harvested from her garden.  Sadly, or luckily depending on your point of view, she never bottled up anything like this creepy little mandrake root from Alice Tochylovska.



 

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Cthulhu Fhtagn! Libregon Edition.

 I can't wait to see this digital Cthulhu idol sculpt from Brazilian artist Libregon in physical form.