Game designers prefer Rebecca because it picks up undercuts without tearing. The resin is non-brittle, meaning a dropped miniature will bounce rather than shatter.
The Rebecca line usually requires a 1:1 or 2:1 mix ratio by weight (check your specific tin).
Let’s get the boring, necessary bit out of the way. The resin arrives in a sturdy, foam-lined box with no warping, no bent staffs, no broken fingers (praise the casting gods). The High Quality label means something here: the usual pinholes, mold slips, and rough edges associated with smaller-run casts are virtually absent. What you get is a single piece of cool, grey resin that feels denser and smoother than standard — almost like sculpting butter that has been frozen into diamond. woodman casting rebecca high quality
The mold lines, where they exist, are finer than a cat’s whisker. A single pass with a soft file removes them.
From a hobbyist’s perspective, this is where the high quality edition truly shines. Game designers prefer Rebecca because it picks up
I tested with both airbrush (for base skin and dress volume) and brushwork (for eyes and lace). The resin took primer perfectly — no beading, no tackiness. Even with heavy washes, details remained razor-sharp.
Woodman Casting – The Rebecca Collection (High‑Quality Edition) I tested with both airbrush (for base skin
When craftsmanship meets artistry, the result is a masterpiece that transcends the ordinary. The Woodman Casting studio is proud to unveil Rebecca, the centerpiece of our latest high‑quality collection—a stunning wooden sculpture that captures the timeless elegance and spirited presence of its muse.
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