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I feel like there has to be a better product.
There is a better product. http://www.staples.com/Reeves-Liquitex-Gloss-Gels-Medium/product_SS1082627It's expensive, but IMO worth it. It comes in different degrees of thickness, so you can use the thinner version for smoother water, and the thick gel for waves.This isn't a river, but it gives you and idea what you can do with a dead flat surface, some acrylic paints, and one coat of gel:The talus along the banks is actually just unsifted dirt, secured with thinned white glue (I do not use matte medium as it has a tendency to form whitish globs, or what I call "snots").More detail on this project: http://ganddinz.blogspot.com/2011/08/lake-redux.htmlDavid, I think you're off to a good start; my recommendations are that the color gradations along the banks seem too uniform; I'd make them more irregular, and add shallow patches at random locations toward the middle of the river. Also, I wouldn't use the WS talus; just get some plain old rocky dirt, bake it to sterilize it, and sprinkle it around in irregular deposits until it looks natural. Also, take some large-ish rocks that have flat sides (or grind some flat surfaces on them) and glue them at strategic points on the river bed. Finally, you can make white water by mixing a very small amount of white acrylic paint into the gel and dabbing it on where white water would naturally occur.Here are some rapids and small falls I did in Z scale--this whole scene is about the size of two business cards. White water is done by mixing tiny amounts of white acrylic into the gel.