Create your own desktop Jurassic Park!
It's very straightforward to build your own dinosaur game scene or game pad with dinosaur obsessed children. With some household trash, such as old newspapers, cardboard, residual paint and egg boxes, you can quickly create your own dinosaur stereo model, perfect Environment for your child's dinosaur toys and models.
Using cardboard to create landscapes, the old base from the toy fort or castle is very simple, but parents often ask us what plants they should put into their game scene. Fortunately, with help coming soon, we offer some advice to help mom and dad themed dinosaur games without much effort or expense.
Make model shrubs, trees and plants for your dinosaur Playmat or Diorama
It is very easy to make vegetation for Jurassic Park-style game mats, and all young people can participate in helping to make plants, trees and bushes that their herbivorous dinosaurs can eat. However, be careful when using scissors to ensure that children are well supervised. We recommend putting down some newspapers to protect the kitchen countertops or the table you work on, as some paint may split because young children can become a bit too eager to finish them. Prehistoric plants.
First some bushes
Take some brown crepe paper, brown paper [even a newspaper painted brown looks good], and smash it into a small ball. If you have any old table tennis it is better. Simply apply the ball to brown, which can be the basis of cycads. Cycas is a fern that evolved in the Paleozoic. It was produced during the dinosaur [Mesozoic] period and is the staple food of many herbivores such as stegosaurus. They are still alive today. They are palm-shaped seed plants with large, thick trunk-like stems and crowns of fern leaves. Dicksonia is a popular garden plant that is a spectacular focal point in any plant display, so without these exotic plants, there would be no complete dinosaur game.
After completing the sago base, take some green cards and cut out the tapered leaves [making them look like palm leaves]. When making a fern crown for you, I found it best to take a green or green paper, cut it into triangles, and then cut some uneven scratches on both sides to create a leafy effect. Make different sizes of leaves and glue them to the top of your sago base with glue or tape. The fronds are arranged in a circular pattern around the top of the cycad.
Be a cycad - a liar tip
This is a quick cheating for making cycad plants. Use the bottom of the egg box to make the basis of sago. Each cardboard egg rack can be cut into brown. The flat base is the ideal top for bonding green fern leaves together.
Cheap bushes - increase vegetation
You can create small bushes by cutting the kitchen sponge [usually these sponges are green and very convenient]. Use new sponges, cheap sponges to work like expensive brands, and cut out irregular blocks. Glue them around the model with glue. The toy store that sells model rail accessories can provide dyed lichens and moss bags, and can also be used to "green" your dinosaur game mats.
Model Rockery of Dinosaur Playmat
Take some cobblestones from the garden, give them a good wash, and build your own model rockeries. We found that smooth pebbles are best used. We bought some from the local flower shop, and there are some plastic leaves and flower shop oasis, so that we can stand up some branches and cedar leaves in our landscape. Glue the pebbles together with super glue or tape and place the sponge pieces in it to form a rocky landscape.
Some dinosaurs sunbathe on such rocks or use them as observation posts so that they can pay attention to prey.
Current trees
For example, if you can walk in the late Cretaceous in North America, you will be surprised by the familiarity of the vegetation. You will see oak, maple, poplar and many other types of "modern" trees. Model trees purchased from toy stores, especially conifers, work well in your dinosaur landscape, but you can make your own and more interesting.
Tree ferns are well-matched with cycads, which are common in the reptile era and are very simple. Place three thin green cards on top of each other and roll them up with short edges to make a tube. Secure the tube with tape in the middle. Using a pair of scissors, carefully cut one end of the roll or tube into strips, about six inches. Then, carefully, twist and pull the end to make the tree longer. The strip will gradually curl down to form the leaves of the tree. Use a colored card to set it up and use a sticky tack or coin to weight the base to make the tree stand upright. Make trees of different sizes and use different colored cards to make the groves and place them on the edges and back of the model [the largest tree on the back] to create the impression of a hollow forest.
Background - complete the scene
Add a background to your dinosaur game pad. Use a large white card to let children draw or draw a background for your model. Don't forget to paint some distant volcanoes. The prehistoric scenes are incomplete and there are no volcanic views!
Build a dinosaur nest!
Remove the lid from a washed jam jar or other kitchen lid and cover with a thin layer of pulp so you have a rough dish and then use paper leaves, or even garden cedar Small pieces [washed]. And dry]. You can now place a dinosaur nest in your stereo model by simply attaching the base to your model with tape. In order to make some dinosaur eggs, you need to roll them into balls with some white paper or crepe paper to make small dinosaur eggs for your dinosaur nest. Scientists believe that all dinosaurs will lay eggs, so nesting in your game scene is very real.
Completed contact
Finally complete your prehistoric scene. Use the black marker to add some detail to the model. Since some types of grass evolved in the Cretaceous, more vegetation, even grass. Maybe you can draw a three-toed dinosaur footprint and make a track on your playground. Now all you need to do is add dinosaur models and toys, and your kids can use their fun and cheap dinosaur games to create their own dinosaur adventures.
Orignal From: Creating a Desktop Jurassic Park - A Guide to Cheats for Making Dinosaur Game Scenes (Part 2)
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