Many of the later photos are just my tinkering with the color scheme. Note that some photos contain other Tiny Furniture Sets, such as the Medieval Bakery, which I was painting alongside this set. The last photo in this review was painted by Tiny Furniture, and you can see how the model was painted for a lighter mood. A cheat is to look for a picture of a page from a book on the internet, reduce the size of the picture, print and cut it out, then use Museum Wax, putty, or some other temporary glue to glue the printout onto the book. The pages of the book itself may require freehand (or just a few squiggles). Hopefully, this review's painting guide will make it less difficult. Painting Guide: Since the miniature is closer to terrain than a human figure, most painting of the miniature is well within the ability of a new painter. The desk itself has a number of brass-knobbed drawers and a metallic lining. The desk is a trove of eccentricity: a small chest, various potentially ominous books, a preserved hand, a skull in a bowl, an odd octohedronal quill-holder, potion bottles, some leaning books, a small cask of reading material, an important-looking sealed scroll, several less-important scrolls crammed into a recess, an important cup, all centered around an open book. (The quill stand, by the way, can alternately be painted as a potted plant!) The accessories are a quill stand, an inkwell, a candle, a wooden stein, and a bottle of wine. The desk is the desk itself, and a backing board (which you could also use as a generic wooden wall section for another diorama). The miniature set itself consists of four pieces: a comfortable chair, a two-piece desk, and a sprue of accessories. The miniature can also be ordered professionally painted by Tiny Furniture. I've also included a painting guide in this review for newer painters. The Dark Magister's set, while perhaps titled for a wizard of evil alignment, can nonetheless be painted for any sort of magician, scribe, or medieval academic or researcher. Yet, at the same time, I find these miniatures, since they're terrain, easier to paint than most generic fantasy miniatures (no eyeballs!). Tiny Furniture known by miniature painters for their highly detailed and fantasy-realistic miniatures. Introduction: Tiny Furniture is a one-woman resin miniature company located in Russia.
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