Red
Super Freak
Well Dave was nice enough to answer my question as usual and this what he had to say in regards to the base.
"Not all our pieces have a landscaped base, it tend to be an individual choice as far as the artists are concerned. I like both versions and when I did the Doctor Who pieces I went for the clean base with a tiny touch of an environment such as the daffodil with the Auton. I was going to add tiny details to future pieces but…. oh well. With the D9 pieces we went for a full landscape and for me it has to be defined and lifted from the base as if it were a section cut from the scene. If the sand was flat on the base it would look like a print pasted to the base…. it would have no depth. There is also a technical reason for it and that is thickness. The piece has to have pins, to lock it to the base, and if the base is not thick enough they will break out."
Heres a few pics from their Facebook page(can you feel the love) and there are plenty more here.
Thanks to the Dwimmerlaik for making me aware.
"Not all our pieces have a landscaped base, it tend to be an individual choice as far as the artists are concerned. I like both versions and when I did the Doctor Who pieces I went for the clean base with a tiny touch of an environment such as the daffodil with the Auton. I was going to add tiny details to future pieces but…. oh well. With the D9 pieces we went for a full landscape and for me it has to be defined and lifted from the base as if it were a section cut from the scene. If the sand was flat on the base it would look like a print pasted to the base…. it would have no depth. There is also a technical reason for it and that is thickness. The piece has to have pins, to lock it to the base, and if the base is not thick enough they will break out."
Heres a few pics from their Facebook page(can you feel the love) and there are plenty more here.
Thanks to the Dwimmerlaik for making me aware.