So, as you can see from the title, I finally came back!
I finished the first 3 toughest weeks of exams and just have next week and then the last exam on 6th June. Until then, my posting rate will be moderate and after that I hope I´ll be able to go crazy!
Now onto the interesting stuff:
I continued to work on the extra 8 trees and added some of the cast rocks to them

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It was extremely easy to attach them. I mixed some more of woodland scenics´
lightweight hydrocal (which is the same stuff I used for casting the rocks, but this time a bit thicker) and applied it directly onto the base. The excellent thing about this hydrocal is that is still accepts water after dry, which means that attaching is extremely easy (I had no idea about this, so it was a nice surprise

). What I did is put a blob down on the base, get some water onto the rocks face to reactivate it and then just pressed it against the hydrocal blob. Then used some extra mixture to hide gaps and that sort of stuff.
The best thing about the reactivating part is that it allowed me to mix two different rocks, and once mixed it becomes pretty hard to tell them apart

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I applied some more rocks to other trees, and I forgot to take the picture

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I let that dry overnight (actually one week, but it was dry overnight

) and then I went to painting them, also with woodland scenics´
liquid pigments I believe they are called. I followed the instructions on this video because the label on the pot didn´t really tell to what ratios I should mix the paint:
I even made my own applying brushes and mixing pots

.
The brushes are a toothpick attacked to the foam pieces from the old GW monster case with hot glue

. I mixed very little amounts to not waste too much paint as i only had to paint 4 inches squared maximum. The colours I used are
yellow ocher as a secondary colour,
burnt umber as secondary and then main colour and black.
This is how it looks after the
yellow ocher and
burnt umber with the first coat of glue were applied. I noticed that it is possible to make lighter highlights by drybrushing with a paint-less brush while the colors are still drying before the first glue coat.