lurpdog101
Freakzoid
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2014
- Messages
- 96
- Reaction score
- 1
the elven cloak with mine is heavily weathered too, as is the jacket etc
Haha. Glad to hear it worked out and you secured one, Remy!
Yeah, the low ES really lit a fire under me to grab some Wraiths while they're still around. Have to admit, the evil Gollum part of my nature is happy to have two LE Wraiths, though I don't think they'll spike like Aragorn, anyway. Aragorn is really tempting, too, but I'm kinda tapped out for collectibles spending and I don't want to get too deep into LOTR. Pretty neat how everything turned around for ACI, though. I seem to recall them getting a pretty hard time, in the beginning, and Aragorn especially being ridiculed and now everyone's scrambling to get one.
Aren't elven cloaks magically clean?
Mine is so weathered it looks more like it's been vomited on...
Guys, good news. For those that has a cloak too heavily/sloppily weathered, the weathered paint can be cleaned with alcohol. My wife spent some time today experiment with it, and now we got a very nice and clean pretty cloak. Here is what she did:
- Have some 70% alcohol, some Q-tips, and cotton balls.
- Work on the cloak small section at a time, by placing the cloak on your open palm. For spots that are very dark or have heavy paint, clean it very gently with alchohol soaked Q-tip, while gently rub lightly painted areas with a alcohol soaked cotton ball. The key is be really gentle on the rubbing. You don't want to ruin the texture on the cloak fabric. Also, avoid contact between alcohol and the green leafy elven broach. Don't want to ruin the broach's paintjob by accident.
- Once you cleaned up the stains you want to get rid of, wash the cloak in a small washing bin with a teaspoon of "clear-n-free" washing detergent (a very gentle detergent with no perfume, no dye, no bleach) and fill it with enough warm water to cover the whole cloak. Gently submerge the cloak and very lightly rub the cloak just a little bit, to clean off the stains the alcohol loosened up. Take it out after a minute or so, and rinse it with cold water. If you need it to be extra clean, you can repeat the cleaning & rinsing a couple more times.
- Do not twist the cloak trying to dry it. Just gently squeeze the water out by folding it a couple times and press with your hands, and let air dry (no direct sunlight, no blow dryer). You can press it against some paper towel to soak up more water from it so it can air dry faster.
- By now, you should have a much cleaner cloak, and you can weather the cloak the way you want it, with some very diluted acrylic paint in colors of your liking.
Hope that helps! And thanks to my wife, now we have a very pretty cloak for Aragorn.
Great, so not only do we have to get his hair cut, we have to do his laundry too?!!!
Suddenly This figure is making me feel like a mom.
LOL. Though haircut is not necessary, unless yours' hair is really bad. My wife just used some water and baby oil to tame the hair. It sits quite nicely now with no trimming. Just make sure you don't comb the hair so you don't lose all the gel bonding or straighten out the curls by mistake. Just use your fingers to work the hair to your liking.
Thanks for the hair and cloak tips man.
And that is really cool that your wife helps you out on your hobby.
Got my Lord of the Rings comps today. Very proud to have done art and packaging design on such highly desired high-end figures.
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