Roots from woody plants make great trees and logs. The bark layer of roots is perfect as scale bark. Because they have a higher water content in the cells of the fiber, they keep alot of their little branches. Again, a nicer scale tree effect. Bigger roots make bigger logs and trees. If you have a particularly "busy" root scrap you can use the roots as roots and partialy bury them in your ground material. The thicker part being the tree's trunk. Snap and or twist them and they frey, much like a tree that has been hit by a round or bomb.
Cheese cloth makes a great camo net. So does surgical gauze.
I mix my ground material up 70% celuclay and 30% plaster. This makes it dry faster and it does not suffer the predation of vermin like silverfish over time. As it drys it makes for some really nice texture and when painted and dry brushed looks awsome. Throw in your ground debris and small rocks and varying grits of sand.
Large fields can be broken up by rock outcroppings, abandoned vehicles, wreckage of vehicles or planes, abandoned carts, tree outcroppings, etc. I once did a diorama of an outhouse at a peek of a steep incline. On one side was a union soldier and the other, out of line of site, a confederate. Both were climbing to the top to use the outhouse. Terrain can make some interesting visual breaks.
On Dioramas I think its o.k. to force perspective and make things closer that they would actualy be. It adds to the drama and tension of a scene. Like in Redlegs dio idea. The base can be small but have alot. By using a hairpin turn in a mountain pass with a road just wide enough for 1 vehicle at a time, the rock face becomes a visual obstacle for both sides. As the Germans travel up and over the pass they will run into advancing americans coming down the road. Though they may not see each other in the scene the viewer sees whats around the bend and that is what creates the tension of the situation. The viewer becomes involved because he can see that there is no room to fight it out and something has to give. Especaily if it is a steep drop off or precipice off the road. You make him want to warn somebody.
Good luck, and don't forget PICTURES!!!
Mike
Mike
"Imagination is the dye that colors our lives"
Marcus Aurellius
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail...but, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "Damn...that was fun!"