No love for Spartans? Guys, you can embrace your love of oily men. It's okay.
Alright, something new. As promised in the thread on favorite units (which got diverted into Warrior Priest discussions) here is the latest of my priestesses. This is the "Archlector" (I am not sure what title she will have in the fluff, so Archlector for now . . .) Obviously, I have the War Altar, but if I want to field her on horseback, here she is! Click for larger pictures;

The horse is from the general kit, the legs are Bretonnian knight's, the swords are from the Emperor's Champion (one is, obviously, a Milliput cast made in Instant Mold), the shield is another cast of a master made from a Wargames Factory hoplon and an Empire shield boss, and the body is from a Reaper "Crusader" miniature (I think the Crusader Queen or something like that). The boy holding the sword and helm comes from the same kit. A bit of plasticard, some green stuff, and a handful of little bitz and the job is done!
I have discovered a good way of getting nice casts from double-sided molds; if at all possible make the first side of the mold as a "press mold" (put the piece flat on a smooth surface, and press the Instant Mold over the top). Freeze that, with the piece still in place. Then create another mold for the other side. This is how I did the shield mold.
You then need to put in a very small amount of Milliput - it works much better than Green Stuff - and smooth it as flat as you can. I dished the surface slightly, scraping excess off with a smooth piece of plasticard. Then, I pressed it together hard.
The sword was done in a similar way, but I allowed the piece to overhang the mold, so there was a hole in the side. That way, excess putty could ooze out. When casting the piece, I put milliput on both sides and smoothed it flat, so there wasn't excess. I then used a thin line of superglue down the center (and a piece of thin wire, for strength) and pressed the two halves of the mold together. The superglue doesn't stick to the Instant Mold, and this method avoids the "copy is too thick" problem.
Comments welcome!