Expensive Hobby Tools That Aren't WORTH IT?

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I've bought some kind of expensive hobby tools over the years. Are they worth it? Some CERTAINLY aren't.
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Пікірлер: 535

  • @imagifyer
    @imagifyerАй бұрын

    As a godhand owner I can say they are 100% worth it.....with a caveat. They're 100% worth it for gunpla building as they cut cleanly and don't tend to leave stress marks that show up as white patches on an unpainted gunpla model. For warhammer or other tabletop games where you're going to be painting the model they'll still cut clean but the value isn't quite as apparent as the paint will cover any surface imperfections

  • @Sonintendy

    @Sonintendy

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah. Godhand nippers are amazing. But there is very little value outside of Gunpla

  • @Matcapoeira86

    @Matcapoeira86

    Ай бұрын

    Came here to say this. I too have some high end clippers and they save a TON of time and frustration. Even on Warhammer models.

  • @martinjrgensen8234

    @martinjrgensen8234

    Ай бұрын

    Also they are quite fragile. It you aren’t careful the tip can snap off if you twist it while cutting.

  • @ashley-r-pollard

    @ashley-r-pollard

    Ай бұрын

    Best cutters for plastic kits of whatever flavour.

  • @aerynmusick4548

    @aerynmusick4548

    Ай бұрын

    Thats what i was going to say. If youre painting the model, they quickly become not worth it.

  • @PrzybyszzMatplanety
    @PrzybyszzMatplanetyАй бұрын

    I like to say that as a hobbyist your best friends are metal shop, hardware store, medical supplies store and cosmetics shop. Most essential and cheap tools are found there.

  • @doubledog5894

    @doubledog5894

    Ай бұрын

    … I would add: thrift stores, Restore (Habitat for Humanity shop, filled with recycled raw materials) and…🥁drum roll, please🥁….the Dollar Tree!!!! 💵+🌲=✨💖

  • @charbroilbeefcake6095
    @charbroilbeefcake6095Ай бұрын

    Ohhhh, "Live, Laugh, Love" would be great stenciled on the side of my post-apocalyptic tanks for a certain tank mini's game by a talented game design studio. Shameless plug. Thanks for the idea!

  • @ironjehoshaphat2764

    @ironjehoshaphat2764

    Ай бұрын

    Great idea for Tanks for the Apocalypse!

  • @halfblindbear
    @halfblindbearАй бұрын

    I have worked construction for most of my adult life. Something that was instilled in me by my mentors was, buy the highest quality tool you can afford. The price difference is a payment against frustration and shotty work. I also had a mentor tell me that you rent tools, they all wear out eventually, and if your tools don't wear out you aren't working hard enough. So when it comes to hobbying tools i follow the same approach as i do with other tools. Its far more a waste of money if i don't use the tool as opposed to ising the tool and it wearing out.

  • @dirigoallagash3464

    @dirigoallagash3464

    Ай бұрын

    Buy once, cry once.

  • @patmunro1982

    @patmunro1982

    Ай бұрын

    The other thing I heard, is when getting a new tool for a purpose or the like, buy one cheap, if you use it enough to wear it out, then go for as good as you can.

  • @yonstenger

    @yonstenger

    Ай бұрын

    That’s an Adam savage classic there. The “buy cheapest, wear it out, then buy expensive…”

  • @VJMorph

    @VJMorph

    Ай бұрын

    Shoddy.

  • @halfblindbear

    @halfblindbear

    Ай бұрын

    @@VJMorph we say shotty as in shot full of holes, in my next of the woods. It may have started out as shoddy. But then again wader and waiter sound exactly the same when spoken by the locals.

  • @benbonney
    @benbonneyАй бұрын

    My missus bought a cricut for designing stuff for our wedding but I found it really useful. I put all my Bloodbowl teams in their own custom cases and have their team name and logo on the outside in vinyl

  • @MrBizteck

    @MrBizteck

    Ай бұрын

    My daughter has one for her design ambitions. I NEVER thought of using them for hobbing ......

  • @doubledog5894

    @doubledog5894

    Ай бұрын

    We had one at my previous job (museum ‘maker’ studio) and I had no idea how cool they are until my co-worker walked me through a test run. They are awesome for custom airbrush templates! You can get all sorts of adapters for them with different cutting bits or even mechanical drawing bits. If my workshop wasn’t already overflowing with tools and odds n ends, I’d definitely invest in a Cricut machine for sure. They are really cool. Actually, there is a slightly cheaper company called Silhouette. They make cutting machines as well (though I’m not sure if those are Apple/Mac compatible). 🤔

  • @AzraelThanatos

    @AzraelThanatos

    Ай бұрын

    @@doubledog5894I think it's more of different store brands that expanded outward. With the right tools for either of them, you can cut and/or etch plasticard for a LOT of detail work. You can also do some leather tooling with them

  • @dougsundseth6904
    @dougsundseth6904Ай бұрын

    For brushes, when I'm teaching beginners' painting classes, I tell my students to only buy really cheap or really high-quality brushes. If you spend $0.50 for a cheap acrylic brush, it will probably last just fine for one or two models before it starts to hook. The same is true of a $5-10 acrylic brush. (They might last one or two more minis). The Da Vinci Maestro Series 35 brush I'm using now, I've been using as my primary brush for almost 2 years now. It cost me something like $18 through Dick Blick. It doesn't take as much care as you might think (that's one of the advantages of a Kolinsky), but of course if you let paint dry in the bristles or leave it sitting point down in your rinse cup you'll wreck it, so there's that. The experience of painting with a quality brush would be worth the extra money by itself but the longevity makes it cheaper per model to use a good brush than a cheap brush for me. Just my $0.02, or perhaps $18.

  • @ChrisBates-sn2nb

    @ChrisBates-sn2nb

    Ай бұрын

    My Da Vinci brushes require far less care then other brushes. Sure, don't give one to a toddler who just jams their enter brush into the paint pot. However, if you are beyond that stage then they last for years. If they do get shoddy, a quick wash with some brush soap brings them right back to new. I won't buy the GW brushes because they are more expensive - you can get the same quality (if not better) for less $ with a Da Vinci.

  • @AzraelThanatos

    @AzraelThanatos

    Ай бұрын

    Oddly enough some of the Dollar Tree cheap brush sets are damn near indestructible and have lasted me for years.

  • @timothyyoung2962
    @timothyyoung2962Ай бұрын

    I have no expensive hobby tools. My tools are like the brave soldiers of the Astra Militarum. They are here to serve a purpose, and once that purpose is served, they die with honor in the name of my hobby and are forever buried in my work room waste can, soon to be replaced by another courageous, and cheap, warrior.

  • @joshkosecki1024

    @joshkosecki1024

    Ай бұрын

    This is the way.

  • @jonesfigures

    @jonesfigures

    Ай бұрын

    That being said, doesn't hurt to have a couple elites in with the fodder...most of my brushes are bought bulk, get used, then transferred to the "junk" section where they live out their days for rougher and rougher uses. That said, I do have a couple nice brushes that I try to ONLY use for detail, etc...but once they slip...off they go

  • @tushymcbollocks

    @tushymcbollocks

    Ай бұрын

    Astra Mili..what? You're in the Guard, son...

  • @RequiemWraith
    @RequiemWraithАй бұрын

    A note on the Artificer brushes, they're re-branded Windsor & Newton Series 7 brushes.

  • @sebastianwei7721

    @sebastianwei7721

    Ай бұрын

    But… they worked so hard designing these… 🥺😂

  • @theanimaster

    @theanimaster

    Ай бұрын

    They’re more likely REJECTS of series 7 brushes that GW bought in bulk and rebranded.

  • @vicbadger8902

    @vicbadger8902

    Ай бұрын

    Honestly, are current W&N series 7s even as good as they were 10 years ago, before the big weasel drought?

  • @marcinbaltazarsarnikowski5891

    @marcinbaltazarsarnikowski5891

    Ай бұрын

    I had the those and thee were splitting like crazy

  • @derpstick5467

    @derpstick5467

    Ай бұрын

    @@vicbadger8902I’ve heard no which is sad to hear since I found a local store that sells W&N series 7. Might still go down there to test them out.

  • @DanteMac26
    @DanteMac26Ай бұрын

    Oh man, now I feel the need to do a Chaos Rhino with “live, laugh, love” stenciled on it!

  • @tazstidson4231
    @tazstidson4231Ай бұрын

    .... The first time you load up a pin drill with 0.5 drill bit.. And attempt to drill a hole in the foot of a figure of a 60 bucks model... Still gives me nightmares..... Every time. Lol. 😁🤣

  • @TheKrenshar

    @TheKrenshar

    Ай бұрын

    For me it's the 0.55mm bits that I have to accept are around for a good time, not a long time. The saving from getting a reel of copper wire for free has quite possibly been countered by the number of drill bits I've bought.

  • @lukerazor1
    @lukerazor1Ай бұрын

    Inkscape is an excellent open source vector graphics program. Free, as in beer and free, as in speech. Works on all desktops too.

  • @Nippleth

    @Nippleth

    Ай бұрын

    This, this, this, a hundred times this! I've done a ton of stuff using Inkscape, it's super versatile and free!

  • @Stefogre
    @StefogreАй бұрын

    9:30 to 10:00 - I made the gate for the Proxxon using old Legos. A single row lego just fits in the guide groove. Same for the circle jig, I glued a thumb tac pin from the reverse side a of a flat Lego tile. Those accessories fron Shifting Lands can be quite expensive IMHO.

  • @Colorcrayons
    @ColorcrayonsАй бұрын

    Frisket... You are the first human I have heard use that term since 1987 when I was in my graphic design class, hovering over my California Job Case, typesetting for my school paper. I use it frequently myself, especially the liquid variety which is a godsend in panting miniatures. Say what you will about it being old fashioned, but there is a definitely an undeniable suave style to being perched in front of a drafting table, red masking your layouts for the next print job.

  • @briochepanda

    @briochepanda

    Ай бұрын

    We still sell it at the shop I work at, very occasionally, I might add. 3 sizes in both gloss and matt.

  • @MoPost
    @MoPostАй бұрын

    Design nerds unite! Cricut, stencils, vector art are all worth the time (and $$$)

  • @Karlmakesstuff
    @KarlmakesstuffАй бұрын

    The proxxon and guider pro upped my terrain making no end. As a bonus, they make working with expanded polystyrene far less messy. I also bought the shifting lands circle jig 2.0 - the first one didn't have much over a homemade jig, but the second one has a ton of handy bells and whistles. I don't own a cricut, but some friends do and I made some designs for them using inkscape, which is freely available. It doesn't have all the oomph that illustrator does, but it certainly gets work done.

  • @thejosephchrist

    @thejosephchrist

    Ай бұрын

    Getting a proxxon next month I think. I'm excited!

  • @Karlmakesstuff

    @Karlmakesstuff

    Ай бұрын

    @@thejosephchrist Heck yeah! Any plans as to what you want to make?

  • @RavenMorpheus
    @RavenMorpheusАй бұрын

    In this video Adam talks about expensive freeze pops... Longbeard here, been "hobbying" for 30 years. Can't go wrong with zuron clippers. £7 a pair. I have a H&S Ultra airbrush (bought circa 2016), and a Fengda bd183 airbrush (£90ish vs £48ish). The Fengda is my "daily driver", because H&S nozzles/needles cost around 2-3 times those for the Fengda, and in a small way I do regret buying the Ultra, it just doesn't do any better than the Fengda. I used to buy GW brushes, way before they rebranded them as "artificer", and we all know they're W&N Series 7. I had a couple of series 7's but found them to be no better than the Creative Models Kolinsky sable brushes I buy at £3ish a pop. Most "hobby" tools have a cheaper equal alternative.

  • @egnaroelprup

    @egnaroelprup

    Ай бұрын

    For how cheap they are the creative model brushes are insanely good, been using them for some time now

  • @earnestwanderer2471
    @earnestwanderer2471Ай бұрын

    I’m so super frugal that I still blue tack my models to a soda bottle cap for painting. The upside, other than price, is that I can have a half dozen models in process at the same time. That said, I always start with the intention of batch painting but then wind up pretty much finishing one model before moving on to the next. Which goes a long way to explaining the mountain of shame.

  • @utility63

    @utility63

    Ай бұрын

    I started using the plastic tubes from M&M Minis candy for holders. I can swap the caps, and I use them to store sand and basing material so they have a good weight.

  • @oddtreepress420

    @oddtreepress420

    Ай бұрын

    I brought a box full of small lidded jars for some use, that I've since forgotten, several years ago. Recently I've found that they make perfect holders for painting. They fit my hand just right and they are stable and weighty enough to safely set on my work table if I don't want to hold it. If they need more weight, I just fill the jar with something. And you can unscrew to lid slightly and turn it with your thumb while holding it without repositioning your grip. A good repurpose for a case of jars that I would likely never use otherwise.

  • @TylerProvick
    @TylerProvickАй бұрын

    My expensive hobby products are: 1) A good brush. I use one brush for everything and I use the best brush I can buy. When the tip wears off I buy another. I don't worry about it because I know that every second of my painting experienced is improved by a good brush. It doesn't matter about skill or quality of the paintjob. You can definitely do the same thing with a synthetic brush but for me the experience is worth the extra cost. But then, I buy a Rosemary & Co pure kolinsky sable brush for $14 CAD 2) Vortex paint mixer. Before cheap models were available on Amazon I bought a refurbished lab mixer. It is expensive but worth the cost.

  • @Millennialrage
    @MillennialrageАй бұрын

    Godhand has a full line of nippers, as well as other *very* high quality tools. The SPN-120s are the top tier but there are lower tiers designed for different applications. Trust me, the Japanese know their scale modeling and the tools required. They are well worth the money. Combine them with a glass nano file and seam lines and nub marks are short work.

  • @margaretwood152

    @margaretwood152

    Ай бұрын

    ▶3:33 = Yes but *_WHY_* are the GW Clippers "Trash" (❓) (i.e. do they F Up the Plastic? Are They Not *_§harp_* (?) ( Oh, right: you can't say: because _____ NDA )

  • @adamlucas64

    @adamlucas64

    Ай бұрын

    They are far more useful for Gunpla than war gaming models. Especially if you don't intend to paint the kit, as they don't leave much (if any) mark on the plastic when cutting. War game miniatures are meant to be painted, so that point is mostly useless. Still great, but they are very fragile and not best for this particular hobby.

  • @adamlucas64

    @adamlucas64

    Ай бұрын

    ​@margaretwood152 they are extremely expensive for the quality. They do the job and do it well enough, but you can get the same or better quality for less money.

  • @mycatistypingthis5450

    @mycatistypingthis5450

    Ай бұрын

    I have some cheaper godhands (some €30, I think) which is a step up from the €11 clippers I had before

  • @MilitantWildcat07

    @MilitantWildcat07

    Ай бұрын

    @@adamlucas64 I disagree. I own and use both the Citadel Fine Detail Cutters and God Hands. The Citadel cutters are fine but my first cut with the God Hands made me say “oh shit” out loud. There is a reason people love the God Hands and you’ll know it as soon as you use it.

  • @KombiGnome
    @KombiGnome28 күн бұрын

    By and large, I go by "buy once, cry once", but that doesn't necessarily mean buying the best is always the right answer. Sometimes the 2nd or 3rd best option will work just as well and you avoid the sense that the tool is somehow "precious" and to be used sparingly.

  • @patmunro1982
    @patmunro1982Ай бұрын

    I got a laser cutter and have been using the hell out of it, making your own wood buildings for terrain is great. "Oh, I need a church" press button, assemble.

  • @GladeRiven

    @GladeRiven

    Ай бұрын

    I could use one of those. Might just get the laser module for the Ender 3 I have.

  • @madnessbydesign1415
    @madnessbydesign1415Ай бұрын

    I use clippers that I got from the makeup aisle at my local Fred Meyer (Kroger). They have a nice flat cutting edge on the backside, which is what you want. I paid around $10 US for them. After a few years, and a lot of use, I noticed that they were not as sharp as they once were (like most of us), so I got another pair. If each one lasts me 4-5 years of heavy use (plus, I can still use the originals, they're just not super sharp), it would take me 40-50 years to make up the cost difference with the Godhand clippers. By that time, flame-throwing robot dogs will have ended us anyway, so I'll save the cash now, thanks. Brushes are tough. I bought some Kolinsky sables that were ordained in secret rituals to never lose their perfect tips, and... yeah. Didn't last. I see videos about how to maintain/recondition/resurrect your brushes, but I've never been able to get the results the content creators do. I do like sable rather than synthetic for most things, but I've come to accept that brushes are not forever. I buy decent ones from my local art supply store, and I do my best to keep them alive for as long as I can. At some point, they migrate to the 'utility pile' of brushes for roughing in things, or scenery work. Circle of life... :)

  • @Krogg666
    @Krogg666Ай бұрын

    When you were talking about tools we couldn't use as kids, I immediately thought "sewing scissors," and then you said it too. Lol. It must be universal.

  • @BunsenB14

    @BunsenB14

    Ай бұрын

    I said the same thing to my wife as we were watching.

  • @BrianBrown-vd1vv
    @BrianBrown-vd1vvАй бұрын

    Great video, and you are looking sharp to boot. Thanks for all your hard work.

  • @nittneylion84
    @nittneylion84Ай бұрын

    Love my God Hand nippers. But only use them for fine clipping from sprues. I have cheaper ones for general cutting. But I have NOT used my Artis Opus brushes because I worry about ruining them like other brushes…LOL

  • @elijahdprophet

    @elijahdprophet

    Ай бұрын

    I was gifted a couple of Artis Opus M series brushes last xmas and it took me a while of staring at them to pull the bandaid off and use them. Mostly I wanted to try them out before Adepticon when I would have the chance to buy more in person. Did they make me a better painter? Probably not, what they have done though is gotten me to be more conscientious about brush care and cleaning, which has helped them retain their shape better than when I was using cheap brushes I didn't care about.

  • @terrencemiltner1005

    @terrencemiltner1005

    Ай бұрын

    Tell someone you have watched Black Magic Craft without saying it, *looks at Proxxon wire cutter*

  • @derpstick5467

    @derpstick5467

    Ай бұрын

    @@elijahdprophetI’m still using synthetics but I really do want to get some natural hair brushes like artist opus, I’ve been taking care of my synthetics so I’d probably be able to take care of the natural hair ones.

  • @matumbo716
    @matumbo716Ай бұрын

    My partner has a Cricut and she had some textured cardboard for it so I got her to cut out some shingles for terrain roofing, worked a treat.

  • @AzraelThanatos

    @AzraelThanatos

    Ай бұрын

    If you get the right tool for it, you can use it to etch craft foam for easy brickwork for terrain

  • @matumbo716

    @matumbo716

    29 күн бұрын

    @@AzraelThanatos what type of foam?

  • @AzraelThanatos

    @AzraelThanatos

    29 күн бұрын

    @@matumbo716Basically the cheap craft foam sheets you can find in a lot of craft isles in stores. It's a soft, flexible foam and you often see it cut into shapes because it's easy to work with. Add a layer of glue or modpodge over it and it still gets rock hard, not sure about it with spray paints/primers as I've normally used it in conjunction with other things, but it also works really well to make a sheet of brick or cobblestone and grab some of the punch cutters that are rather cheap for scrapbooking and you can quickly make base toppers that work well and are easy to modify on the fly for pinning or breaks or missing bricks. The foam can also be used rather easily and quickly with a very low power setting for laser cutter/etchers.

  • @rustedbeetle
    @rustedbeetleАй бұрын

    I have invested in two Neewer LED light panels and have them attached to my hobby table with table clamps and adjustable arms, also by Neewer. These light up my entire desk, and I can reposition them as needed for the project I'm working on. The lights are adjustable for both temperature and brightness. They are 97+ CRI, with a temp range of 3200K-5600K. I usually keep them set around 4800k-5000k. It makes both working and painting tons easier.

  • @samuelsanfratello4617
    @samuelsanfratello4617Ай бұрын

    The Games-Workshop Medium Layer Artificer Brush cost me around $22 when I bought it several years ago. I actually opened it, used it a few times, then cleaned it very thoroughly and put it away. I much prefer the Artis Opus range these days!

  • @jonathanfrederick9645
    @jonathanfrederick9645Ай бұрын

    Godhands are absolutely the smoothest cleanest nippers you can get. I have been using cheapo Amazon nippers but building some fiddly Drukhari I busted out the Godhands and... wow. I genuinely forgot how good they are. Absolutely worth it. GW Artificer brushes are trash, tho. Windsor and Newton are leaps and bounds better and cheaper. Cheaper still are Vallejo Pro Modeling brushes. They are great and a great value.

  • @ironjehoshaphat2764

    @ironjehoshaphat2764

    Ай бұрын

    The W&N and Vellajo brushes hair?

  • @derpstick5467

    @derpstick5467

    Ай бұрын

    Apparently the artificer brushes are rebranded W&N ones, as someone else said, those must’ve been the rejected brushes that GW picked up from the trash cans.

  • @Dan_Dee
    @Dan_DeeАй бұрын

    I totally have that issues as well. One of the main reasons why I don't use my fancy brushes or paint larger minis is the fear or ruining them.

  • @intzbk1
    @intzbk1Ай бұрын

    I buy cheap $10 clippers from ACE, made in the USA. For brushes, I buy cheap synthetic ones and after they start not holding their tip, they go in my junk brush cup for basing, shading, drybrushing, etc. I have a nicer set that was around $20 but only use that for fine detail likes eyes or superfine highlights. I use a 3 and a 0 for almost everything. I think the biggest thing I learned about brushes is rinse them often even if batch painting and using the same color paint. Once paint starts to dry in the bristles, it's the start of game over.

  • @oddtreepress420

    @oddtreepress420

    Ай бұрын

    Those ACE house brand clippers work well. I've also bought pretty good ones from auto parts stores that work well. They are usually a bit higher though.

  • @wookieerage66
    @wookieerage66Ай бұрын

    Great video, Uncle! I feel better about the kolinsky sable brushes I bought a year ago that I still haven't used. I think it's about time I paint some orks with them👍🏽.

  • @tylerttinsley
    @tylerttinsleyАй бұрын

    God hands used to be the only option, For standard minis any cheap “single sided nippers” will work well enough. They can be bought for 10-30 dollars. They are knock offs of god hands but miniatures don’t need the precision and often have harder and thicker gates then gunpla.

  • @dirtybasementterrain
    @dirtybasementterrainАй бұрын

    My Proxxon has been a godsend for making terrain. I have a decent collection of add-ons from shifting Lands and Dungeons By Hand and it has really brought my terrain making to a whole new level

  • @doubledog5894
    @doubledog5894Ай бұрын

    Oh yes. I love the art supplies topics. A couple months ago, I splurged on a nice, expensive, natural sable brush (for painting minis) and I was a bit apprehensive for a couple days. (In art school I always used really crappy brushes.) I did eventually overcome the fear/anxiety and it was worth it. Since then I’ve purchased 4 more fancy brushes in various sizes and also discovered a new brand (*new to me) called Velvetouch art brushes (red handle version). I highly recommend them and they’re not as expensive as the natural sables. I am a thorough (some would say “OCD”) brush cleaner and use this stuff from Blick called “The Masters: Brush Cleaner” - which works great. Of course, if you don’t like brush maintenance or don’t have a consistent brush cleaning routine then I’d stick with your usual synthetics. 🎨

  • @anvil242
    @anvil242Ай бұрын

    I used to have a robocutter when I was doing paper terrain. It was a model or two before the cricket. Amazing machine and really helped speed up the process of construction.

  • @sporf_sporf
    @sporf_sporfАй бұрын

    I don't have a gw brush, but I do have some natural hair brushes and I love them. They don't require that much care, in fact accidentally leaving them in the water cup seems to do less real damage to them than it does to artificial, however I really only use them for detail work, (eyes, mustaches, edge highlights, and lining, etc.) Most of the time I use synthetics for basecoat, wash, and drybrush.(especially drybrush)

  • @lostchild0122
    @lostchild0122Ай бұрын

    I mean, the artificer brush is just a winsor newton with a citadel handle. It's a good brush, and if you can't source winsor newton, artis opus, rosemary etc. for reasonable prices a decent option. Citadel will always be more readily available.

  • @Alric66
    @Alric66Ай бұрын

    I purchased a "Wow Stick" one of those low speed hobby drills. I use it for pinning and mounting models. Very nice and worth the price, it's low speed makes it much more controllable than a dremel tool.

  • @billdefranza4927
    @billdefranza4927Ай бұрын

    I love all Tabletop Minions videos!

  • @M1903Enjoyer
    @M1903EnjoyerАй бұрын

    Godhand clippers/nippers are fantastic. They are great at what they do, perfect for gunpla do to the size. And good for small connection points for GW style kits. I use cheap nippers to clip the big sections and Godhand for small points and cleanup of the large snips.

  • @willemmeijer4159
    @willemmeijer4159Ай бұрын

    Every scenery build project of mine starts with installing my Proxon hot wire cutter. Totally worth it. There are 2 things to make it a better product, the guider pro 2.0 from shifting lands and a footpedal attachment (so that you can use 2 hands to handle the foam and your foot to switch the machine on (or off).

  • @matthewantosh7075
    @matthewantosh7075Ай бұрын

    I was a fool and went in to GW for a brush, picked one off the shelf and brought it up without checking. My wig almost flipped when the bill was 35$.

  • @looselycollected7505
    @looselycollected7505Ай бұрын

    I bought an older Cricut used in a yard sale cheap. I had to buy a cutter head(didn't have one for some reason but the new one is actually an aftermarket upgrade with a few more options), a cartridge(older machines need them for the basic cutting info), a printer cable, cutting mat, and a program called Sure Cuts a Lot 2. With those I had maybe $40 total in them. And I downloaded Inkscape(vector graphics program) for free. With all that I could cut anything I wanted pretty much. A year later I traded the Cricut and some cash to move to a bigger Cricut(still an older model with the cartridges). Which maybe added another $20 to my outlay. And doubled the width of the cutting throat and the length of the cutting mat. I can still use this cheap work around to make what I want. You just don't have access to the online Cricut maker stuff. But the deals are there if you look. Loads of people buy them, then don't use them as much as they think they will. Then dump them cheap to get them out of their way. You have to have a computer. But even a cheap laptop would probably work.

  • @EricSquirmydadBrown
    @EricSquirmydadBrownАй бұрын

    I've not used a Cricut cutter but I have made extensive use of a similar item; the Silhouette cutter to make paper and cardstock terrain.

  • @Ghilliedude3
    @Ghilliedude3Ай бұрын

    I have 2 expensive things that I use specifically for painting. 1) my lights. I have a good set of LED photo lights that I use as my painting lights. It's made a huge difference in my ability to paint easily. 2) A good airbrush and compressor. I use my airbrush so much, and having a reliable brush and compressor really makes painting things with it stress free.

  • @wonderboy2402

    @wonderboy2402

    Ай бұрын

    Same, and I would at a Lab pant mixer. Having a mixer makes painting much easier.

  • @JHB141
    @JHB141Ай бұрын

    Winsor & Newton series 7 brush still in the tube? GUILTY! Also, Uncle Atom's 3D printer: "Hey! You drilled a hole in your house for me, and....?"

  • @funghazi
    @funghaziАй бұрын

    "Live, laugh, love." - The Emperor

  • @nicholasmetrano6411
    @nicholasmetrano6411Ай бұрын

    I feel you on the artificer brush, I had the exact same experience, was at the store and thought "well, I should buy something to support the shop" and was surprised by the price. I left it unused for a while but now, having used it, I know that in my hands, I would have been just as well off with a brush that was half the price.

  • @thecraftydm
    @thecraftydmАй бұрын

    As a terrain crafter, I use my proxxon almost daily. The guider pro and angle cutter are a must have.

  • @dr.rotwang
    @dr.rotwangАй бұрын

    The expensive tools that I need to use more often are all my Northwest Short Line modeling tools. Things like my True Sander and Chopper. For those not familiar Northwest Short Line makes tools and hobby products used a lot in the scratch building, model train, and sculpting community. Lots of things for getting perfect angles, fitments, etc. on various types of polystyrene shapes. They are a god send when making master models for production. They might be a bit overkill for terrain building or conversions but you save so much time when your 45 degree angles gets cut right every time on a build.

  • @chiplundsmark5936
    @chiplundsmark5936Ай бұрын

    As far as the clippers go, saw a nice looking pair at Hobby Lobby for $7 just yesterday. But I already had some clippers from the $1.25 store. Now there is a good place for hobby supplies! Also use cheaper brushes, but not the dollar store ones. Those don't even have a pointed tip. That foam cutter is intriguing, might get one of those someday!

  • @chadnine3432
    @chadnine3432Ай бұрын

    I have a couple of Kolinsky sables that I use on special occasions. I use synthetic hair and nylon brushes for most work.

  • @bored_pyro
    @bored_pyroАй бұрын

    I can't speak for GW brushes because I can't bring myself to pay for their markup, but switching to Sable brushes was both terrifying and the most satisfying thing I've ever done. They paint SO much better and clean up SO much better than synthetic that I'll never go back. It hurts that it took me two years to get over that fear. Mind you, I still use synthetic for washes and things that wick heavily to avoid getting paint in the ferrule of my nice brushes.

  • @Misterfairweather
    @MisterfairweatherАй бұрын

    I've used a set of xuron cutters for years and actually have a few harbor freight flush cut pliers in my workshop that I use for other tasks that work great. Truth is it doesn't matter how good the cutters are my process will always have me cut the sprue first leaving a large chunk on the figure then trim the chunk because it reduces the likelihood of having to do repair work on a piece. Even this is less relevant on newer models because a lot of the time they have the sprue connections obscured or interior to the piece. I think my favorite expensive hobby "tool" are my commercial file cabinets. Bought them cheap when shuttering a bankrupt company they have a door that flips up and a flat shelf that rolls all the way out so I can use the full depth of the shelf and each shelf is rated to hundreds of pounds because they're designed to hold folders full of paper.

  • @markchristy9704
    @markchristy9704Ай бұрын

    I'm especially amused by the comments about the brush. I'm in a similar situation with a Windsor & Newton series 7 brush I asked for and received as a gift some years ago. It's the only non-synthetic brush I own and have yet to work up the courage to use it. On the other hand, I recently bought a set of "Uncle Atom's favorite" brushes from Monument Hobbies and am really enjoying them. Even though they cost more than I've ever spent on a single brush before, I feel like I know how to take care of synthetic brushes, so I've actually been able to use them without worrying too much.

  • @Drezrale
    @Drezrale22 күн бұрын

    God hand SPN-120s have been invaluable for kitbashes for me, the cut is so clean that it makes things far easier and saves me hours on projects.

  • @ZAKKANWAKKAR
    @ZAKKANWAKKARАй бұрын

    The most expensive tool you own is the one you never use. Some of my tools are priceless. 😂😂😂

  • @Slurgical_3D_Terrain_Channel

    @Slurgical_3D_Terrain_Channel

    Ай бұрын

    lol….I feel that way as well.

  • @threewiseman1
    @threewiseman1Ай бұрын

    I have an Iwata airbrush that I'm terrified to use. I bought it thinking I wanted the 'best' one I could afford, but then learned you're better off learning with a cheapo, as you can easily clog them when still learning airbrush technique and maintenance.

  • @philm.5153

    @philm.5153

    23 күн бұрын

    Use vallejo flow improver to dilute your paint to the consistency of skim milk. Then, on your airbrush air compressor set the psi around 22 to 25. Frequently clean the tip of your needle using a q-tip dipped in flow improver. Practice trigger control and aiming using water on a dry piece of cardboard. It will build your confidence. Also, airbrushes put down such thin coats of paint, it's easy to cover up if you don't like it or make a mistake.

  • @deathmachine777
    @deathmachine777Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the insight!

  • @Buildpaintplayrepeat
    @BuildpaintplayrepeatАй бұрын

    After watching the Goobertown Hobbies video about cleaning and repairing natural hair brushes versus synthetic brushes, and comparison under his microscope, I did buy a monument hobbies, natural hairbrush. Brush maintenance and keeping the tip on that brush has been so much easier than my synthetic brushes, but part of that may just be having more experience and knowing a little more what I’m doing now.!

  • @cgordon13
    @cgordon13Ай бұрын

    Now I suddenly want a shrine to Khorne with "Live, Laugh, Blood" on the side.

  • @julianflores5647
    @julianflores5647Ай бұрын

    hey adam, i have a proxxon and the best thing for me is seeing my sons learning on it to craft blocks, ramps and other shapes. beeing in a lucky position of having one and just goof around with it. previously i used it to build terrain (stone bridges and towers). hope this helps.

  • @Wadtomaton
    @WadtomatonАй бұрын

    Early on when I was getting back into the hobby, I ended up kickstarting Squidmar's brushes and still haven't used them. It's also a situation where they are sable brushes and I mainly just use synthetics now, but I also was initially afraid of ruining them because of how expensive they were. They come in a really nice looking package at least. 😅

  • @albinofreak620
    @albinofreak620Ай бұрын

    It’s worth a trip to the art supply store to get a sable hair brush. I think it’s a little overblown how much you have to care for them, you just use them like a brush and clean them with brush soap once in awhile, and accept that you’re going to wear it out over time, then it will become a utility brush, then a texture paint brush, etc. The precision you get from a sable hair brush makes painting more fun for me…. very worth it. A marked up Gw sable brush on the other hand…

  • @troybirch6478
    @troybirch6478Ай бұрын

    Listening to this video as I paint with my cheap brush and that set of nice table brushes staring at me from across the bench 😂

  • @coreyesser7898
    @coreyesser7898Ай бұрын

    I can honestly say my wife and I got excited about getting a Proxxon a few years ago. It hasn’t been out of the box yet.

  • @mekko1413
    @mekko1413Ай бұрын

    With regards to the God Hand clippers. I do not use those particular ones but I have a pair that are similar by Dspiae. I love them typically i use my Citadel and AP clippers to clip the parts out and then go back with the Dspiae clippers to take the nubs off and little to no clean up is needed and you never end up with a divot from where the clippers pulled out extra plastic.

  • @elgrifolorian
    @elgrifolorianАй бұрын

    Mainly use my army painter brushes since I'm too afraid to use my artist opus S ones.

  • @thekartoeffel
    @thekartoeffelАй бұрын

    I can't imagine that a citadel brush is more worth / has a higher quality than a Raffael or Winsor & Newton Brush. I wonder if citadel just sells rebranded Winsor & Newton brushes

  • @tazstidson4231

    @tazstidson4231

    Ай бұрын

    ... If only they were... Lol. 😂

  • @thekartoeffel

    @thekartoeffel

    Ай бұрын

    @@tazstidson4231 Ok thanks for the clarification. I also found this somewhere: "GW uses a mixture of different hairs and synthetics in its brushes, as they’re useful for different things. All their brushes are made by veteran brush makers Winsor and Newton, though to the specific requirements of GW."

  • @darkowl9

    @darkowl9

    Ай бұрын

    Allegedly the Artificers are (or at least, were at one point?) made by W&N. Not as high quality as the Series 7, but still close. I like natural hair brushes, but I can also understand the other aspect that Adam didn't mention which was that sable is similar to fur with regards to wild animal welfare as those tail hairs are highly prized...

  • @simonbelmont0993
    @simonbelmont0993Ай бұрын

    As someone who builds gunpla as well as wargaming, the God Hands are absolutely awesome. Now, personally, I think the community makes a bigger deal out of stress marks left by inferior nippers than they should (sand, prime, paint, you'll never know unless you're using egregiously blunt nippers). So, ymmv on the cost:benefit ratio.

  • @martinjrgensen8234

    @martinjrgensen8234

    Ай бұрын

    A lot of gunpla builders are into it, because they don’t have to paint. So having excellent nippers is really important

  • @simonbelmont0993

    @simonbelmont0993

    Ай бұрын

    ​@martinjrgensen8234 This is true. There are a lot of 'just-snap-it-together' builders who don't take any extra steps, so the appeal is higher for them. I don't regret the purchase because they really are that good. When something like a shoulder or a blade or any straight line that will be visible on the model is attached at the sprue it's nice to get a flush cut without the worry that over-sanding that piece will result in a wobbly line. That said, you'll get a good enough cut with cheaper nippers.

  • @artistpoet5253
    @artistpoet5253Ай бұрын

    use the GodHands. I actually dropped mine not less than two weeks after starting to use them and the only thing that broke off was that little pin to keep the tool from opening too wide. So I pulled the spring and they've been part of every model project I've done in the last three years of use. ONE IMPORTANT NOTE: well, two actually: Make sure you tune that gap bolt to keep the bits from impacting . They should just meet. Don't cut anything thicker than the gate. I actually use a Bandai Beginner's Level side cutter to remove parts at about a 1/16th inch away then trim up with the Godhand. The stuff I've bought that I haven't used yet is mostly because I'm still working with the just I already have. There were some brushes I was hording but I recently got a commission project so I'm using them now.

  • @Maverick626
    @Maverick62628 күн бұрын

    as a gundam guy that does sometimes wh40k , yes , the godhand are the crême de la creme of nippers , but theres a caviat , the amount of plastic that we usually have to cut from the sprue is minuscule compared to the chunky ass sprues that GW makes because they love to waste plastic , so IF you have a godhand or recently purchased it , DO NOT use them for GW sprues , maybe for minor details like , you want to cut a hand from a marine arm , some antennae in a turret , minor detail

  • @EdAllen
    @EdAllenАй бұрын

    Sable brushes last just fine if you rinse them well and use some brush soap on them right after rinsing. The Cricut I've considered but held off. I've used the Godhand clipper some, but mostly been working through half painted old metal figures & 3D prints the last couple years, so not clipping plastic much. The Proxxon I only get out occasionally, but I have made some fun stuff with it.

  • @R-SXX
    @R-SXX28 күн бұрын

    I collected the warhammer imperium subscription for more than a year; and only came to magazine 23 because life and stuff. I recently cancelled it because it got soo expensive but seeing how warhammer changed prices now, I am very happy to have a large backlog of miniatures waiting for me for my hobby time.

  • @alphaleigpyne
    @alphaleigpyneАй бұрын

    The most only Citadel tools I haven't used yet is the water effect bottle that GW they used to sell. I had it in my closet for a decade I thought I'll save it for a terrain project I thought I was do in the within that decade. Life in general is why I haven't used it and the lack of production on the clear resin tool I could get from diy store. The rest of the Citadel tools are the Rhinox Hide spray, the 2012 detail brush that came in with Citadel Eavy Metal Edge Paint set sold in a box and cutting matt I rarely use for kitbashing.

  • @elainegallagher6015
    @elainegallagher6015Ай бұрын

    I bought the not-latest Godhand clippers at Christmas ( £30 older model, the nearest ones are £50). I really do like them and I've used them a lot on a bunch of minis including a gunpla. I've got Rosemary & Co brushes that I haven't used a lot, though.

  • @BunsenB14
    @BunsenB14Ай бұрын

    A friend of mine once said something only has "value through use". I try to remember this when I worry about breaking a tool. A tool broken through use is more valuable than a tool that never gets used. The money has been spent, you might as well use it.

  • @greenbook7315
    @greenbook7315Ай бұрын

    I don't have the artificer brush or the godhand, but I do have the Army Painter Kolinsky Masterclass, and the Dspaie 3.0 nippers. But are alternative equivalents. The masterclass brush is alright, it holds a sharp point, but since purchasing a full set of rosemary 33s, the masterclass has become sort of my beater sable brush. I use it mostly for edge highlighting with metallics. The Dspaie nippers I use on every model I build, and am so glad I bought them. They can get much closer to the model than other snips without risk of ripping plastic. Which means a lot less sanding or use of an exacto.

  • @crossbones8956
    @crossbones8956Ай бұрын

    I have the godhands, and yea they are really good. They are really for removing the nubs after the part is removed from the sprue. I use these along with my Tamiya nippers.

  • @kastel6658
    @kastel6658Ай бұрын

    I have used the cricket software to create my own stencils but it is not user friendly. I have made waffle patterns and what not but gets very complicated. Thanks for the recommendation on some other software options!

  • @GladeRiven
    @GladeRivenАй бұрын

    1. Godhand: Any tools used for Gunpla are fantastic for minis. Especially Godhand. Just got some Godhand scribers for panel lines and they are BUTTER SMOOTH. 2. Brushes: Just buy cheap sable water color brushes from your local art store or amazon. 3. Cricut: I kinda want a Cricut for styrene sheets. Frisket is a fantastic use, too. They make smaller models. Inkscape is an open source vector program, should work fine for this. 4: Hot cutter: Maybe if I start working with foam. Most expensive hobby tools I own: My 3d Printers. But I can model and print my own stuff. Still, there is a lot of stuff you can just buy that someone else has made to print off. No regrets, but it takes a LOT to experimenting to learn how to use them properly. Money saving tips: You can get a LOT of milage out of cheap CNC bits and a pin vice. Look at tools for other hobbies: Jewelry tools in particular, but leather hole punches work just as well on styrene. I'm staring at a cheap mini-lathe that is saying "buy me." Craft sections of dollar stores and big box stores sometimes have useful nuggets. Wax paper is perfect as a disposable pallet for paint mixing (unless you are going for very thin paint, then you'll need something to contain it). Always look outside the hobby, you might be very surprised what will come in handy. Quality Tools tips: Find an art supply store, preferably a small independent one the college kids use if you are in a bigger city. Use water color brushes for mini paints, since those are applied in thin coats. Drafting supplies, particularly stencils, are super handy.

  • @crayven
    @crayvenАй бұрын

    Bought my mini clipper from a homedepot in the dry flower section a decade ago. They are supposed to be used for clipping wires. So the edge would be pretty rough. Then last year a saw a review of the godhand clippers and thought, that can be cheaper. I took a metal file and filed the back kompletley flat and sharpened the angles a bit, now I have a super flat cut like I get with more expensive clippers and all for 3-5 bucks and some extra minutes of work.

  • @maxthrust976
    @maxthrust976Ай бұрын

    I have the Godhands, and I love them. I use them sparingly, though. There are a lot of scary warnings on the package about all the things that can damage them. (If you haven't done it yet, you can read all that stuff with the google translate app on your phone and just pointing your camera at the text)

  • @peters.9463
    @peters.9463Ай бұрын

    Good question! I have this handy foam cutter from the Army Painter I have bought in a terrain building box set. So far I never used it. Then I have a bunch of cheap brushes and paints, so much paints! I think I only used about a quarter of all my paints. 😅 If you will ever use the god hand nippers, I would be very interested in a review ;)

  • @zanzarmar
    @zanzarmarАй бұрын

    When I first got into the hobby I used cheap nippers. First big upgrade was to tamiya thin nippers. It was amazing. Last December I treated myself to a pair of God hands. Best purchase I have made for the hobby.

  • @fredclasson7865
    @fredclasson7865Ай бұрын

    Yeah, the only expensive things I have are brushes and green stuff. And Citadel paints of course. Everything else came from the toolbox in the garage. I don't have a wet palette, just a bundle of wipes in a box.

  • @haze6336
    @haze6336Ай бұрын

    I have the same dumpster fire that you have on your desk. When coworkers ask how my day is going, I just point to the dumpster.

  • @johnashley-smith4987
    @johnashley-smith4987Ай бұрын

    Thanks for this video! The worst hobby purchase I ever made was buying a " Testor's " Aztec" airbrush...particularly since I was going from an Iwaata HP-SB which was expensive, but worked like a dream and made airbrushing straightforward and fun. It was simply a matter of mixing up a colour, decanting it into the removeable , side feed colour cup and away I could go...the Aztec however always seems to start any session with a clogged tip, due to a sticky interior spring in the paint tip... I suppose if you used it to spray single colours it would work fine, but that defeats the purpose of owning an airbrush... Thanks again!

  • @creationswithvic
    @creationswithvicАй бұрын

    Retirement fund 🤣😂 Great video! Thank you TM 🙏

  • @TacticalStapler308
    @TacticalStapler308Ай бұрын

    The scissors you’re not supposed to use for your freezer pops are Gingher fabric shears. My mom had a pair too. They’re ~$60 a pair.

  • @VidJunkie63
    @VidJunkie6311 күн бұрын

    I have enjoyed the Kool-Aid that is Godhand Clippers fanaticism. I own a much less expensive nipper I purchased decades ago when I started the hobby. Those original nippers were great, or so I thought, then I decided to try the Godhand Clippers... Wow. Smooth. No deformation of the parts.

  • @failfurby
    @failfurbyАй бұрын

    I bought the first model of Citadel clippers way back when. A+ for their longevity and usefulness. I don't remember what I paid though, way too many years ago. I think there is one tool that is worth spending a little extra on for better quality and features: a hand/pinning drill. I went through several cheap, bad choices before finding one I liked using and did everything I needed it to.

  • @stevejohnson3991
    @stevejohnson399120 күн бұрын

    I too have unused or underused tools in my shop. But, I think tools are one of the best investments (in yourself) that you can make. What is your time/effort worth, and when you do use those tools, how much have you saved? What these tools that you mention cost, you can spend in an average restaurant for lunch (which I often do), and poop it out later. I rarely know what I am doing when I try something new, and I am often glad to find that tool that I bought years ago and had not used yet is exactly what I needed. I also spend thousands each year on various forms of obligatory purchases like car/house/health insurance. Man, that would buy a lot of tools and materials. So, yes, sometimes we err in our purchase decisions, but it is a drop in the bucket, practically speaking, and I live by "he who dies with the most tools, wins".

  • @pointandshootvideo
    @pointandshootvideoАй бұрын

    I have the GodHand clippers. Great for my Gundams as you said! I also have both of their magnifiers as well. You should check them out. My most expensive "tool" is the RGG lamp - $250! Love it!

  • @SpencerWolfe
    @SpencerWolfeАй бұрын

    For someone who likes building larger sized starship and starfighter models ... the cutter is very useful. Vinyl masking film (like Oracal) to create hull plate patterns (called aztec plating), custom registry names/markings as well as window and canopy masking. I use a Silhouette Cameo 3 with the upgraded blade set to actually cut thin sheet styrene and Tamiya masking sheet also. There are folks out there who have side hustles in the sci-fi aftermarket community just making vinyl masks. As for the rest ... nah ... cheap flush cutters and decent gold taklon brushes for me. I don't do enough with foam to move beyond a good utility knife.

  • @akvavit0
    @akvavit010 күн бұрын

    I have the expensive tamiya clippers. Ill be honest, nothing i would recommend for beginners, but after 20 years in the hobby it is a really nice to have.

  • @Xandrillus
    @XandrillusАй бұрын

    Godhands are amazing! Maybe a little overpriced but it's pretty obvious the difference between them and normal clippers.

  • @dwhisper79
    @dwhisper79Ай бұрын

    I put on this video while I'm assembling models, and you got to "God Hand" while the exact same pair was in my hand to clip some parts away. They've been worth absolutely every cent I paid for them. I've owned a whole bunch of different nippers, and they're just a whole different thing.

  • @Jathom
    @JathomАй бұрын

    I have a Series 7 brush that I have used, maybe, 3 times out of fear of ruining it. In the same period of time I've owned it, I've gone through a handful of Monument Hobbies brushes.

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