coffee grounds

treide

New member
I read with interest the article about raiding the spice cabinet for basing materials. I was throwing out some coffee grounds the other day and it struck me that they look a lot like dark forest soil.

Has anyone ever tried using them for basing, and more importantly is there anything bad about it with respect to the paint or metal?
 

Orb

procrastinator
I\'ve used tea leaves (wet, direct from teabag after a nice cuppa; \"it wouldn\'t hurt, Sir\") and various dried herbs so I see no reason not to use grounds.

My personal opinion is, though, that u should paint everything; even if its natural - the mini is painted, so natural things can have a tendency to stand out; we tend to exaggerate things - highlights/shading etc due to scale effect, so in my mind/eye the same would apply to groundwork.
 

Shawn R. L.

New member
The only two things that come to mind with coffee grounds is the smell and, if I\'m correct, their strong acidity.
 

treide

New member
Thanks, guys.

@orb - do you varnish/coat your base before painting it? I would think painting might otherwise knock things loose, especially if the basing material is very small or granular.

@shawn rl - I was a bit worried about the acidity too. Maybe I\'ll put some on a loose piece of metal to see what happens.

@ogrebane - I don\'t use instant coffee - can\'t stand the stuff! Thanks for the warning though.
 

Xavier

New member
I\'ve used coffee ground for years. All of my coffee ground is recycled :D

The key to keeping it from decaying is after you enjoy a cup of Java let the grouds set in the open air for a few days until they become dry.

If left unpainted the grounds eventually will come off. I found that by painting the grounds the results is excellent. For me the coffee ground tends to be the size of large gravel and I usally mix it with larger rocks to give it a rubble look.
 

Orb

procrastinator
Originally posted by treide
@orb - do you varnish/coat your base before painting it? I would think painting might otherwise knock things loose, especially if the basing material is very small or granular.

I used PVA glue, diluted to attach the base materials, added in layers (see my woodelf). The PVA glue is pretty strong but I can still lose the odd piece from the groundwork. But I still coat the whole base with dilute PVA which I guess acts as a varnish - then it\'s primed as normal.
I don\'t drybrush much these days, but drybrushing would probably knock off a few pieces as I painted it.
 

Rev

Member
oooh imagien the mid game kick you could get.

\'excuse me sir, why are you licking your space marine bases?\'

\'I... well, er... its a long... well the thing is...\'

\'Are you using illegal stimulants to fuel your tactical mindset?!\'

\'well.... errr\'

\'May i lick your Librarian?\'


oooh the hilarity...
 

DaN

New member
At least you couldn\'t accuse your opponents of tea-bagging... But that\'s a whole different story...
 
Back To Top
Top