These 2 pieces were commissions I did for a friend who is a die-hard MOTU fan and collector. They both started out as junkers before I gave them a spruce up. Descriptions from my custom's Facebook page:

"This was a custom for a good mate - took a junker vintage Castle Greyskull and turned into something special. The door was broken at the hinge, which I repaired with styrene and epoxy putty, the whole thing was washed, base coated and repainted both by hand and with an airbrush, with several coats of custom mixed colours, texture paints, and washes. I finished off with modelling 'moss' on the rocks at the base. It was only a shell, so no interiors done."

IMG_1238 by M-bot2011

IMG_1239 by M-bot2011

IMG_1241 by M-bot2011

IMG_1240 by M-bot2011

IMG_1237 by M-bot2011

IMG_1242 by M-bot2011

IMG_1236 by M-bot2011

"The commissioner of this piece asked for it following the MOTU Castle Greyskull I did for him. Greyskull was fun and more or less straightforward, so I agreed eagerly. He had a junker Snake Mountain for me to spruce up. 7 weeks later...
Firstly, the detail in this mould is intense. When you look at it closely, there's 5 hidden faces in the sculpt that I had never seen before, and the vines are everywhere. My goal was to bring out all that detail with paint apps, and really give the city a creepy, slimy vibe. It features:
- Airbrushed base coats, including 5 shades of deep purple to fluoro pink to give the playset depth.
- Airbrushed and hand painted vines over the whole shell, bringing out the existing detail.
- Hand painted eyes, somewhat mimicking the original stickers.
- Texture paints with custom mixed blended acrylic colours over the 'stone' areas and steps.
- Drybrushed archway and gate, with 'rust' effects to bring out detail and give it a dank, worn metallic look.
- Partially scratch built chains and cuffs for the 'prisoner platform', using a costume jewellery chain from a $2 shop, and some original cuffs from the model.
- A partially scratch-built bridge which extends the walkway around from the front to the back, using and extra segment of bridge from another junker Snake Mountain. It includes scratch-built support struts on the underside of the walkway and some of the left over chain to secure it, as well as epoxy putty. It's strong enough to support a couple of figures.
- A repainted snake from the top of the mountain, with the tab underneath dremelled off to allow it to swivel from back to front while the playset is closed (the bridge pieces do not allow the playset to be opened anymore).
- A repainted 'wolf's head', without the microphone feature. The wolf's head can be removed.
- A airbrushed and hand-painted 'glowing egg' at the rear of the playset.
In all it was a marathon job, but heaps of fun, except maybe for the scratch-built portions - not one of my talents I'm afraid. I'm pretty thrilled with how it turned out."

DSC_0787 by M-bot2011

DSC_0788 by M-bot2011

DSC_0789 by M-bot2011

DSC_0790 by M-bot2011

DSC_0794 by M-bot2011

DSC_0797 by M-bot2011

DSC_0798 by M-bot2011

DSC_0799 by M-bot2011

DSC_0801 by M-bot2011