I looked up the Tar Bender you used to make the water. Interesting stuff, hadn't heard of it. Is it difficult to use? I'm still learning how to make water look more like, well, water
Dear Dutchboyinohio,
There is much to tell about using Tar Bender, or about the many other materials for making miniature water scenery. Before I start writing about my experience with it (it is poisonous, chemical stuff, must be used outside, wearing protecting cloth, gloves and safety-glasses, it takes many different layers and days to finish, it shrinks so the river-elements bend and had to be re-heated in my wife's oven to flatten it out again, you have to use a creme-brulee-flame to remove all the air-bubbles appearing in the liquid after molding it) you should tell me what you need it for.
If you want to make a small pool or brook with little depth, I recommend a one-component material, like Woodland realistic scenic liquid water, available for scale-train landscapes and wargame elements. There is also a version of hard solid balls that have to be melted, but thats the most difficult one since it cloths and hardens before it has flattened out over the area you want it to cover.
If you want to make a river, lake or sea deeper than a few millimeters and covering a vast area, you can think of using a two component chemical like Tar Bender.
My problem was that I was making very thin movable water elements, without a steady table under it (like a modeltrainlandscape) or a vast wooden base (like a diorama). And all of them hat to fit on both sides to all the other elements sides to make the largest variety of different river patterns possible.
Well, let me know what your plan is and I will try to give you some good advice or at least share my experience. It was a lot of try- and error with different failures and mis-casts before my river was finished.