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Post by dayzombie on May 9, 2013 7:32:04 GMT -5
Itar's Workshop has a Kickstarter that is ending in 8 days. Their aim is mostly to sell their dungeon tiles, but they are also selling unpainted dungeon accessories are rather nice and hit a few item types that I couldn't figure out how to craft very easily. I'm going to be buying a bunch of accessories from them, and I figured you all might want to as well. Plus, I want them to reach the stretch goal for the round table...
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Post by dm1scotty on May 9, 2013 8:59:10 GMT -5
That stuff all looks like Hirst Arts stuff. You can buy the molds and cast as many as you want.
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Post by skunkape on May 9, 2013 9:48:28 GMT -5
It is Hirst Arts stuff. I have lots of the molds myself, but if you're lazy or very busy, then you can always participate in the his Kickstarter.
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slurpy
Room Planner
Posts: 283
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Post by slurpy on May 9, 2013 13:50:58 GMT -5
I really dig that gargoyle.
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Post by dayzombie on May 9, 2013 15:35:04 GMT -5
I may end up getting Hirst Arts molds in the future, but most of the pieces I want are scattered across a half dozen different molds. Since I don't need that many of any one piece, I'll probably just buy them through the Kickstarter.
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Post by bloodchoke on May 9, 2013 16:06:30 GMT -5
So Hirst Arts allows you to buy their molds then sell the pieces you cast with them? Pretty cool of them, seems like there would be some copyright issues.
Anyway, as awesome as they look, i'd rather just use 2.5d cardboard tiles, partially because I'm broke, but also because I think I would get sick of looking at the same tile set week after week. To me, that's the beauty in DM Scotty's method, they still look really good (much better than say d&d tiles) and they're easy enough to make new tiles for most adventures.
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Post by danielc on May 9, 2013 16:47:10 GMT -5
So Hirst Arts allows you to buy their molds then sell the pieces you cast with them? Pretty cool of them, seems like there would be some copyright issues. There are and you should get a license from them before you try and sell your creations that use their designs.
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AJ
Room Planner
Posts: 315
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Post by AJ on May 9, 2013 21:42:32 GMT -5
He has one of the best sales rights agreements you will find, in a nutshell, he doesn't mind people selling creations made using his moulds, he just asks for a license fee if you set it up as a business over a certain sales threshold, and he doesn't allow sale of his moulds or copy moulds made using his ones (though you can certainly make your own and sell the products made from them). But if you are just selling a few things over Ebay/ETSY, no license is required. Very reasonable indeed. His legal page
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