Using Commissioned Painting Services or DIY?
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- sann0638
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
Practise is the verb, practice is the noun.
If you get it wrong, it's because you haven't practised enough. Or put in enough practice.
If you get it wrong, it's because you haven't practised enough. Or put in enough practice.
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- Waldorf28
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
I use commissioning services. I think they are great.
But my real advice is on the practice/practise question. It's much easier to remember which is which if you substitute the word "advice / advise" practice follows the same rules, but it's much easier to work out since with advice / advise the verb sounds different.
That's my advice! I advised you.
But my real advice is on the practice/practise question. It's much easier to remember which is which if you substitute the word "advice / advise" practice follows the same rules, but it's much easier to work out since with advice / advise the verb sounds different.
That's my advice! I advised you.
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- rolo
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
I've never heard of practice being spelled with an "s", so instead of admitting that I might be wrong about it, I'll just assume that it's a british-ism and ignore it.sann0638 wrote:Practise is the verb, practice is the noun.
And consult Allen Iverson! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGDBR2L5kzI
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- Regash
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
I've been painting minis since around 1998 and I'm never gonna be good at it, no matter how hard I try.
I'm to impatient and my expectations are way to high, so practicing rather frustrates me.
It's very temting to use a commission service but when I heard what they charge per mini, I was out of it.
That's money I can't even think about spending on something like that.
Whoever uses them, good for you! As long as you don't claim their work as yours and be honest about having them painted for you.
I'm to impatient and my expectations are way to high, so practicing rather frustrates me.
It's very temting to use a commission service but when I heard what they charge per mini, I was out of it.
That's money I can't even think about spending on something like that.
Whoever uses them, good for you! As long as you don't claim their work as yours and be honest about having them painted for you.
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- Darkson
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
Agreed 100%.Regash wrote:Whoever uses them, good for you! As long as you don't claim their work as yours and be honest about having them painted for you.
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Currently an ex-Blood Bowl coach, most likely to be found dying to Armoured Skeletons in the frozen ruins of Felstad, or bleeding into the arena sands of Rome or burning rubber for Mars' entertainment.
- lunchmoney
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
[offtopic]rolo wrote:I've never heard of practice being spelled with an "s", so instead of admitting that I might be wrong about it, I'll just assume that it's a british-ism and ignore it.sann0638 wrote:Practise is the verb, practice is the noun.
Didn't we invent the language?
[/offtopic]
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lunchmoneybb@gmail.com
TOs! You do not need multiple copies of rosters. It's a waste of paper.
Bribe level: good coffee.
#FlingNation find me on page 95
- Talarius
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
Yeah, that promise was the last email I received from him. I've contacted him at the LF email a couple times since then to try and resolve this issue for Sargon without getting a response. Profoundly disappointed this never got resolved. I never would have expected this from him.Sargon wrote:FYI - Neither of these things ever happened.Talarius wrote:Sargon will get a full refund, so the team will be super-delayed but at least he'll get his team *and* his money back.
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
Everyone comments on my "axia" painted teams and my response is always the same... "I wish I could take credit, but I didn't paint them."Regash wrote:Whoever uses them, good for you! As long as you don't claim their work as yours and be honest about having them painted for you.
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
I appreciate your attempts to help out.Talarius wrote:Yeah, that promise was the last email I received from him. I've contacted him at the LF email a couple times since then to try and resolve this issue for Sargon without getting a response. Profoundly disappointed this never got resolved. I never would have expected this from him.Sargon wrote:FYI - Neither of these things ever happened.Talarius wrote:Sargon will get a full refund, so the team will be super-delayed but at least he'll get his team *and* his money back.
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
Nah. Germans did that. You guys just messed it up.lunchmoney wrote:[offtopic]rolo wrote:I've never heard of practice being spelled with an "s", so instead of admitting that I might be wrong about it, I'll just assume that it's a british-ism and ignore it.sann0638 wrote:Practise is the verb, practice is the noun.
Didn't we invent the language?
[/offtopic]
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- Colin
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
No, the French messed it all up (well, the Norman-French).Shushnik wrote:lunchmoney wrote:Nah. Germans did that. You guys just messed it up.rolo wrote: I've never heard of practice being spelled with an "s", so instead of admitting that I might be wrong about it, I'll just assume that it's a british-ism and ignore it.
[offtopic]
Didn't we invent the language?
[/offtopic]
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
This sounds like me for the most part.Wifflebat wrote:I paint all my own teams because I feel like it's cheating if I don't do it myself. I feel a greater sense of identification with a team I've painted myself. I also don't feel like I should spend money on something I could do myself. I wish I didn't feel that way because, despite having spent decades doing it, and getting reasonably good at it, I still really don't like painting.
In the amount of time it takes me to paint a Blood Bowl team, I could play dozens of games (of Blood Bowl or something else.) I have probably a decade of backlogged minis to paint for all my games, and yet I feel the need to paint them myself.
Anybody who says they don't like painting and walks away from it in favor of paying somebody has my empathy, my respect, and my blessing.
I'm an ok painter, but so very slow. I generally like painting, especially when something I painted turns out really well. That's offset by those times when the end result doesn't look as good as I had hoped or I bugger up an already painted area on the mini with poor brush control.
I could pay someone else to paint teams for me. However, I don't feel like I should be doing that, even though I've never painted a team to a completed state in my life (lots of partially finished teams, and many completed individual minis, most of which I've given away). Sometimes I wish I didn't feel like that, but I do.
I've played in tournaments with teams painted by other people, but I borrowed those teams just to use for the tournament and gave them back after the tournament was finished.
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
The English explanation for literally every complaint.Colin wrote:No, the French messed it all up (well, the Norman-French).Shushnik wrote:Nah. Germans did that. You guys just messed it up.lunchmoney wrote: [offtopic]
Didn't we invent the language?
[/offtopic]
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
My, my, my, what a simple opinion started here. I feel there are some people taking this way too personal. Then let`s see if I can answer everything on a quick note...
Again, it`s a different situation when boxes come with models in different plastic colors. At this point the only thin expected ist to finish their assemlbling to be able to play.
But I do not expect people, or let`s rather say "the people I play with", since I usually think about situations that occur, to focus onto one special facette of the hobby. Let`s not forget, I am a hobbyist myself and know that there is many things about it, that make it attractive. Yet I see that, with all the models produced, with all the artful painted miniatures o boxcovers, in magazines or on the web, assembling and painting a miniature is a huge part of this hobby. And as people expect me to learn the rules to play the game, I can expect from others to give their best at painting their stuff.
I remember that someone once mentioned "but this is designed as a boardgame, not a miniature game". Well, partly yes, partly no. In this case everybody should use paper stand ins and generical players like "Blitzer 1", "Blitzer 2", and so on. Partly no, because this game simply isn`t produced that way by the manufacturer, who makes his money from selling games and toys.
By the way, you have to explain to me what epistemological means, as I am not a native speaker of the english language.
A more raw opinion I have is, that people with less creative energy tend to compensate, and I must sadly say that view is born from personal experiences I made on this forum, throughout an overly serious handling of rulesets and a, what people call in a friendly way, "conservative playstyle".
But again, even though my opinion might not be liked by everyone, it`s still not judgemental. I am not trying to push them into another direction.
Yet, I don`t know your level of painting nor the way you have tried to paint your models. If you`re an old geezer like me, you probably have a harder time adapting to new techniqes that come with all the new available colors, that make painting easier. If you want to, we can give it another go via Skype. You don`t have to, but on the other hand, if you`re not satisfied with you painting outcome, you have nothing to lose, but a lot to win. A nice view on the gaming board does not just only give you more satisfaction, it is a huge driver for the gameatmosphere. At least from my point ov view.
The second statement I already answered to vice versa for the gaming stable.
Yet it is interesting. I learned most of my english language skills through comicbooks, which tend to have a more "american grammar".
Nowadays most products are produced in a fabric through manufacturing lines, with robots and as little human input as possible. There`s no problem with that, but a car, to go with the suggested example, is a product delivered in a finished state. Nobody expects you to modify or color the car yourself. That is a different situation here with models, if they do not come prepainted.You can have a really nice car and get compliments on it without having built that car yourself... maybe a sour engineer might say you shouldn't, but things be things. I like having nice things but certainly don't want to make all those things myself.
Again, it`s a different situation when boxes come with models in different plastic colors. At this point the only thin expected ist to finish their assemlbling to be able to play.
Yes, there isn`t an endless amount of time. Yet it is possible to focus on one thing. Some users of this forum are the best example for it, focusing mostly on the rules. That can be observed whenever a rule discussion pops up, or new halfofficial teams, like the one from Cyanide pop up.There are only so many hours in a day, and no one person can be an expert or even vaguely competent in all things. Our world works on an epistemological division of labour... we split up the knowing and the doing among many so that everything can be known and everything can be done, but no one person can cover even a fraction of it.
But I do not expect people, or let`s rather say "the people I play with", since I usually think about situations that occur, to focus onto one special facette of the hobby. Let`s not forget, I am a hobbyist myself and know that there is many things about it, that make it attractive. Yet I see that, with all the models produced, with all the artful painted miniatures o boxcovers, in magazines or on the web, assembling and painting a miniature is a huge part of this hobby. And as people expect me to learn the rules to play the game, I can expect from others to give their best at painting their stuff.
I remember that someone once mentioned "but this is designed as a boardgame, not a miniature game". Well, partly yes, partly no. In this case everybody should use paper stand ins and generical players like "Blitzer 1", "Blitzer 2", and so on. Partly no, because this game simply isn`t produced that way by the manufacturer, who makes his money from selling games and toys.
By the way, you have to explain to me what epistemological means, as I am not a native speaker of the english language.
I am not. Having an opinion and stating it on a forum, a place where discussions are supposed to be held on various issues, is not a court. I`m also not despecting people who don`t paint, I merely think people should not use paintservices as long as they are physically able to paint their miniatures themselves and to always give their best. That`s how one becomes better.Why so judgmental?
A more raw opinion I have is, that people with less creative energy tend to compensate, and I must sadly say that view is born from personal experiences I made on this forum, throughout an overly serious handling of rulesets and a, what people call in a friendly way, "conservative playstyle".
But again, even though my opinion might not be liked by everyone, it`s still not judgemental. I am not trying to push them into another direction.
Again, I have an opinion. It must not be liked by anyone, but because someone does not agree, it does not mean it is harsh. I am sorry if you feel my opinion might be directed at you, I am not having any certain individual in mind.Harsh. I've been painting for 20 odd years. I'm still pretty rubbish, and normally achieve 'decent tabletop standard'. It's not because I haven't practiced- I have- I'm just genuinely not very good at it. And I don't mind painting, and like being able to put out a fully (if poorly) painted team that I painted myself.
Not everyone is going to be a great painter, no matter how many hours you put in.
Yet, I don`t know your level of painting nor the way you have tried to paint your models. If you`re an old geezer like me, you probably have a harder time adapting to new techniqes that come with all the new available colors, that make painting easier. If you want to, we can give it another go via Skype. You don`t have to, but on the other hand, if you`re not satisfied with you painting outcome, you have nothing to lose, but a lot to win. A nice view on the gaming board does not just only give you more satisfaction, it is a huge driver for the gameatmosphere. At least from my point ov view.
Yes to all of your comment IF one doesen`t lean into an extreme at any of those points. For example, I would never be able to paint on a Golden Demon leven, due to various factors. But mostly I`d see that almost as an overkill to what is good for the game.Most are a combination of them, not everyone is everything. You can enjoy this hobby in plenty of ways, and there's nothing wrong with that.
How can you expect to be good at something you don`t like? It simply states you`re lacking the drive to do it. If not, I can make you same offer as to nightwing.I don't paint because I don't like it, the results are still rubbish (after 20 years of trying), it's a chore.
If I could afford it I'd get everything painted by others.
I also really dislike some within painting "stable" constantly patronising people like myself - "keep going, you'll learn to like it" and "you'll improve the more you do" - yeah, I'll keep painting until I die, maybe I'll produce some decent that I enjoy 5 mins before I snuff it.
The second statement I already answered to vice versa for the gaming stable.
That`s an interesting statement. But.....isn`t there always something else that one could do "instead of" where you take time off? I always felt it is good trying to comine everything if possible. For example, I like gaming and I like spending time with my daughter. Naturally we play boardgames together from time to time. We also try to get games where we can play "against the game", since we like each other and do not want to be competitive towards each other.I paint all my own teams because I feel like it's cheating if I don't do it myself. I feel a greater sense of identification with a team I've painted myself. I also don't feel like I should spend money on something I could do myself. I wish I didn't feel that way because, despite having spent decades doing it, and getting reasonably good at it, I still really don't like painting.
In the amount of time it takes me to paint a Blood Bowl team, I could play dozens of games (of Blood Bowl or something else.) I have probably a decade of backlogged minis to paint for all my games, and yet I feel the need to paint them myself.
Yeah, something like Freebooters Fate uses cards for the confrontations, but transferring this to Blood Bowl....well actually....hmmm....I for one could stand to lose the occasional dicing, but haven't found the solution just yet...
I don`t know if this pointed at me, but if so, I`ll put this parallel to painting: I`m not a Golden Demon painter, I don`t even think I`m good at it. But there`s eough people that think I do quite well. No tranferring this to the language. I am not a native english speaker, I don`t even....and so on.Practise is the verb, practice is the noun.
If you get it wrong, it's because you haven't practised enough. Or put in enough practice.
Yet it is interesting. I learned most of my english language skills through comicbooks, which tend to have a more "american grammar".
What is that supposed to mean? I`m clearly missing something here.The English explanation for literally every complaint.
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- Regash
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Re: Does anyone know Laughing Ferret?
It just simply means that all english folk always blame the french people if something isn't to their liking.DinoTitanedition wrote:What is that supposed to mean? I`m clearly missing something here.The English explanation for literally every complaint.
Just a joke, nothing to worry about.
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