>>6790780Sure. I've explained in another threads before, so I wasn't going to give the whole explanation unless someone actually asked.
It's made of 2in (1in on the thin parts) pink insulation foam (they sell it at Home Depot in big sheets, and in some smaller square sheets, but I found those are annoying because you can't get 2 detolf-width/depth ground cuts out of them. I had to break it in half in the parking lot to fit it in my friend's car). I cut it with a hot wire cutter (this isn't the one I have but it has multiple attachments and is almost the exact same price, mine only had the straight attachment
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078P81GGD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_9eJIAb91Q8D6G)
For the rocky surface, I just kind of cut the foam in a ragged, zigzagging way. Then I did it again, following roughly the same shape, but on a different angle (that's how you get the rock surface look.). For the stone bricks, I just took a ruler and a ballpoint pen and dug it in far enough to make hard lines, and in the process did the brick pattern.
I painted them with cheapass acrylic paint from Michael's. I painted them the darkest color first, then layered on increasingly lighter, dryer-brushed layers. I dunno much about painting so I was kind winging it.
The grass in the top left one is just terrain model grass, I did a shit job of gluing it down though. If I use it again I'll paint a layer of Elmer's on there instead of spray adhesive.
That's really about it. All of them are sized to fit detolf shelves, and because of the front support bar, I had to not glue them together. So they are assembled inside the detolf, and all the pieces just kind of sit there. I like how tight a fit this let's me get though, so all of then go all watched way to the walls of the case.
And here's a pic of a foam scrap unpainted that I chopped off I guess.