Skip to product information
1 of 3

Green Stuff World Rolling Pin Temple

Green Stuff World Rolling Pin Temple

Regular price €12,95
Regular price Sale price €12,95
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.
Quantity

Green Stuff World Rolling Pin – Temple

Bring Ancient Temple Textures to Your Projects

The Green Stuff World Rolling Pin – Temple is a professional-grade hobby tool designed to imprint ancient temple stone patterns onto bases, dioramas, and scenery pieces. Whether you’re creating ruins, dungeon floors, or mystical battlegrounds, this rolling pin helps you achieve realistic temple-style textures quickly and easily.

Ideal for miniature painters, tabletop wargamers, and terrain builders, the Temple rolling pin allows you to craft detailed surfaces with consistency. It works with green stuff, milliput, polymer clays, and epoxy putties, making it versatile for any modeling project.

Why Choose the Temple Rolling Pin?

  • Authentic Ancient Design – Adds temple-inspired stonework to bases and terrain.

  • Durable & Reusable – Made from high-quality materials for repeated use.

  • Versatile Applications – Suitable for wargaming bases, dioramas, terrain, and custom modeling.

How to Use the Rolling Pin

  1. Flatten your sculpting medium (green stuff, clay, or putty) evenly.

  2. Lightly coat the rolling pin with water or a release agent to prevent sticking.

  3. Roll smoothly over the surface to imprint the temple pattern.

  4. Shape, cut, or attach the textured material to your model base or terrain.

  5. Let it cure fully before priming and painting.

FAQ

Q: Can I use the Temple rolling pin with green stuff?
A: Yes, it’s fully compatible with green stuff, milliput, clays, and epoxy putties.

Q: How do I stop the material from sticking?
A: Use water, talcum powder, or a release agent on the rolling pin before use.

Q: Is it only for miniature bases?
A: No, it’s great for dioramas, terrain pieces, and larger scenery projects too.

Q: Can I bake polymer clay after using it?
A: Yes—roll the texture first, then bake to preserve the temple design.

View full details