Well, almost…
I wasn’t kidding when I said that greenstuff is a cruel mistress. Part of learning how to use the material is to understand it’s life cycle. When you first mix greenstuff, it is very soft, and can easily be formed into whatever shape you please, but it will not hold sharp detail. Any fine lines you place in the sculpt at this point will be greatly diminished by the next stage in the life cycle, what I call the “Puffy Stage” about 15-25 minutes into having formed the greenstuff, the curing process really starts to begin. you’ll note that the material becomes less pliable, and that any fine detail work you’ve put into it has been undone as the putty relieves the pressure you’ve accumulated on it with your tools by “puffing” back into the fine lines and rivet holes. If you’ve done deep lines, you’ll note that the edged of them have become slightly rounded and aren’t holding the crisp and sharp edges originally sculpted.
Don’t fret. keep working with the shape until you have what your looking for, as the detail work can begin in earnest in the next step of the life cycle, the imaginatively named “detail stage”.
The detail stage starts about 30 minutes after you first finished rolling the putty, but can be in as little as 20 or as long as 45, you’ll get a feel for it after working with the stuff for a while. You can tell that it is ready to hold detail work, as it ever so slightly attempts to hold it’s shape when you manipulate it. You don’t want it so firm that it won’t take a tool mark (the next stage) but you want to be confident that it is on it’s way to curing in the shape it’s going to set in. Another advantage of this patience is that since the putty has begun to cure, the area around the spot you manipulate it with a sculpting tool will react less. This means you can be slightly more aggressive with your pressure and motions, and not have to worry so much about warping or distorting edges around the detail you’re working on.
The final stage is the cured stage. at this point, you can poke it with a tool, and it’ll hold it’s shape, it can be handled, shaved, sanded, clipped and glued, just like any other bit, but changing the sculpt has long since sailed. You’ll often find yourself waiting until the next day to attach greenstuff bits to your miniatures, as they’ll have ample time to have cured, and you don’t have to worry about mashing a cheekbone with your sausage fingers, or leaving your fingerprints on a pauldron.
SO! How do you apply all of this? Well, I’ll show you!