Kodakai said:
I have some Milliput, is this the kind of thing you meant? It's about a year old though, do you know if it has a shelf life? I've also heard of people using Magic Sculpt, do you know if this is any good?
Milliput isn't my ideal but it's certainly one of the clay-like putties (actually it might be the most like clay in consistency/feel). It does definitely have a shelf life and regrettably quite a bit of it might have passed before you buy it. Once it has started to form a stiff skin on one or both of the rolls it is past its fresh state. You can slow this down by storing them, individually bagged, in the fridge.
MagicSculp is one of the best of the alternatives (see comments at bottom), along with Apoxie Sculpt or Apoxie Clay from Aves.
Kodakai said:
Have you had a bad experience with Liquid Greenstuff? Most of the reviews i've read online have been largely positive saying how good it is. I can understand the price criticism as GW's hobby supplies are usually a fair bit more expensive.
Without meaning to be unfair a lot of the people who speak positively about it haven't used any alternatives so they really don't have much basis for comparison. There are a few prior threads here that talk about it that would be worth hunting down.
Kodakai said:
If not Liquid Greenstuff do you have an alternative you could suggest?
Watered-down epoxy putty would be one, this being one of the advantages of having some of this type on hand. But you don't really have to water it down for most filling tasks since they're so soft when fleshly mixed and can easily be mooshed into place.
In terms of a more direct like-for-like replacement, there are numerous filler-based mediums for acrylics that are very similar in principle but far far cheaper, which wouldn't be hard given they come in containers that might be 20 times larger. But in the past when I wanted to fill a join using a paintbrush I'd often make my own on the pallette, using talc or marble dust as the filler.
KruleBear said:
I'd be interested to hear about the epoxy clay brands. I have Gauth the dragon that I epoxied together (poorly) several years ago that I need to fill gaps on. Never filled seems on something with this much detail.
Although it's no longer my favourite sculpting material I still think MagicSculp may be the best starter choice, you could hunt up some of my prior posts on it for details but just quickly I think it's probably the easiest to learn how to use, generally the cheapest and has an amazing shelf life (possibly indefinite with the current formulation).
Einion