Saturday 27 August 2016

Cakeasaur!

Our local Games Workshop ids having a birthday party today, so we baked a cake...


The dinosaur itself is mazipan, painted with food colouring.

Monday 13 June 2016

Building Skinktown (part 2)

I have now finished the buildings at the front, as these views show, they just need painting.



Construction was just the same as before for the rectangular buildings. The painted building in the centre of the lower image was made from a plastic container that some tennis balls were sold it, with half a ping pong ball stuck on top, with some carbon strips added. It was originally built free-standing, which is why it is already painted. I also cut it down in size to fit the scene.

The domed tower at the right of the upper image is a cardboard tube with half a ping pong ball on top, whilst the dome on the building beside it was cut from a polystyrene ball (packed of these can purchased from Amazon for not too much).

The building to the left of that was built from a plastic wine glass with the base removed, and a small ball on top.

Next stage will be painting...

Monday 30 May 2016

Building Skinktown (part 1)

I am building a diorama for Warhammer figures; Skinktown. The building style will be part Moroccan, part Tattooine. It is designed so it could be used as a backdrop to a battle, on a 2' by 1' board, with a road in the centre to fit the existing battleboards. Eventually I will build a second one to go beside it, so we can have a 4' by 5' battlefield.

The basic form, then is a 2' by 1' board, 4mm plywood, just like the other boards, but with a similar vertical piece.


The shape of the land is formed with expanded polystyene, glued down with a hot glue gun. The plan is a road across the back, jumping a ravine on a bridge, with a second road descending from the left to the centre.


So there are two rows of buildings, those at the back in low relief. I built some rough prototypes of the building at the front to get in idea of how it would look, then started on the buildings at the back.

This one will go at the left, and is built of corrugated card from an old box. You can see how it has been cut to allow for the landscape at the right.



Here it is at a later stage, with an addition at the top right. Windows and doors have lintels (card from a cereal packet), the windows have meshes over them and the door is in place.


To give the walls texture, I painted on PVA glue and then liberally sprinkled on talc (I also filled in gaps in the corrugated card as much as possible too). Then the buildings were glued in place.

By the way, the sky was painted blue using a small roller; it gives a much more even finish than a brush; very important for sky.

In this image you can also see two of the prototypes for the foreground buildings.



Then I filled in gaps between the buildings with plaster. I used ready mixed plaster, a tub is only a pound from Poundland. Then it is all painted with white primer (the stuff you use on wood when decorating the house; it is relatively cheap and goes on any surface).






That is it so far. Next I will work on the building at the front.

Monday 18 April 2016

A battlefield

We now have a battlefield!






The tiles and features have been described in previous posts. Each board is 2' square, and there are six laid out, though you can only see four properly.

Here is a battle in progress, ogres versus Seraphon.



We use the SCGT point system to ensure more-or-less equal sides. Ogres won!

Tuesday 1 March 2016

Building Houses

I have built a couple of houses, one a ruin. i have gone for an adobe/desert vibe, inspired by images like these:

https://houseofqueeg.wordpress.com/2012/09/03/28mm-afghanistan-skirmish-wargaming-terrain-board/

http://www.tabletop-terrain.com/archives/2007/07/12/800/cairo-table-for-luggage-lost/

For one thing, a flat roof allows players to put models on them. I intend to build a small village, but for now, here are two isolated buildings:





Bronze Daemon?

My daughter has won a "Bronze Daemon" for her painting of a saurus knight. Details here:

https://www.facebook.com/GamesWorkshopPreston/photos/a.312882932060549.97507.213954711953372/1290824237599742/?type=3&theater


Wednesday 17 February 2016

Building a battlefield

Starting to get a proper battlefield built here are a couple of images. The first is a simple hill. It is built from foamboard insulation, 5 cm thick. It is not nice stuff to work with; use in a well-ventilated area away from children. The rocks are bits of expanded polystyrene glues on. The slope and rocks are covered in plaster, the whole thing painted with primer paint.

The rocks wre painted with dilute black poster paint, which runs into the cracks to highlight the shadows. The rest was painted with green poster paint. I then spread sawdust, dyed with the same poster paint, over the top, glued with PVA.



The feature on the left is removable, and is the muck sponges mentioned in an earlier post.

This second board was made pretty much the same way, but with some bridge supports added (more foamboard with the sides covered in plaster). The stairs are just formed into the plaster, and the road is just black paint. The empty circle front right is where a scenery feature can be places.



Monday 8 February 2016

More miniatures

Here are some more-or-less finished miniatures. This is the Serapon bastilodon:




 Lord Celestant of the Stormcast, and three of his soldiers. These were painted by my daughter, who has gone for green rather than blue, and they look pretty good.



My oldest got given some figures some years ago for D&D but not previously got around to making them. Here are three Irongut Ogres, just needing a paint wash.


This is my one and only figure, a Skink Starpriest.


And a prosecutor I painted:





More scenics

Completed this weekend, junk pile, made from a carbon cone covered in plaster, with bits of sprue, cocktail sticks and coffee stirrers stuck in it.


A second tor, this one leaning alarmingly (foal covered in plaster):


The head of a fallen statue (made of air-drying clay):


Tuesday 2 February 2016

First finished scenics

Three hours in Games Workshop at the weekend, with daughter and friend.


They played a battle, or two rounds of a battle anyway, before abandoning the game. I think both felt they were losing, as one has lost his two big miniatures, the other was quickly losing all her foot soldiers. It did help resolve some rules issues though, with help from the guy in the shop. They spent some time painting too. I do not begrudge the prices GW charges so much when they offer this as well. I even purchased a figure for myself.

Some of my scenery pieces are now complete. The structures are made of clay, then glued to the base (a CD), with ready-mixed plaster over the top. The whole lot is painted with primer, and then the stone painted with very dilute black poster paint. The grass is painted green with poster paint, then covered in sawdust dyed green with more poster paint, stuck with PVA glue. Bushes are lichen from Woodland Scenics.



The brown in these Morrowind style much sponges was acylic.


The statue was a toy, the base a lid and the steps disks of card,


Foam insulation is the basis of this one.


The tower was a bit different, constructed of card, and painted with enamels. The base was the same as above.





Friday 29 January 2016

More scenics

Done some more bits and pieces. These first bits in clay. I have found clay shrinks significantly as it dries, and this first image shows what can happen! I formed the shap around a plastic cup, and when the clay dried, great cracks appeared in it. I am counting that one as a failure, and using it to test paints.


So it looks like the best way to use clay is in individual pieces. Here are some Morrowind-style muck sponges, together with a couple of pillars and an altar.


And a giant statue head.



Another statue. The figure is from a range called Swampsterz, sat on the lid of a cocktail stick packet. The steps are disks of corrugated card with ready-mixed plaster spread on, and carved.



The is "Tower of the Sun Orb", which featured in an earlier post. Now painted (enamel paint to go over the shiny side of the card, with highlighting in mixed silver and black acrylic).


A tor, made of foam insulation covered in ready mixed plaster.




Tuesday 26 January 2016

First miniatures

Here are the first few miniatures. My daughter has the start box for "Age of Sigmar", and this is one of big guys for Khorne, and is the first one she painted:


This was at a Games Workshop, with help from the guys there (otherwise I would have made her start on a small one!). Games Workshop merchandise is pretty expensive, but you do get a good service in the shops for free, so the cost of the goods has to cover that. I do not begrudge the prices so much once I realised that.

I helped her putting them together at first, but she sees to be doing a good job on her own. The painting is all her own work apart from that first one. This is a carnosaurus, and he did have a couple of gaps, which I had to fill in, as you can see on the second image. I am not sure if this was how it was put together or an issue in the model, but it should look fine once painted (and with a rider added).










Here is one of the stormcast army after primer:


I did look at alternatives to Citadel primer. You can get black spray paint for a couple of quid, but it tends to be gloss and may not stick to plastic too well. Car primer paint is supposed to be good, but that is around £6; it did not seem too much more to get the proper stuff for about £10.

This is a seraphon footsoldier (not sure of the technical name), part-painted.





Monday 25 January 2016

Some progress

We put Papier-mâché on the first river boardand it now looks like this.


Only one layer so far, but we plan to do four. It took a long time to dry, and I think that caused the wood to warp a little, so one corner is about half an inch higher. I have since attached braces on all the sides:







Hopefully this will straighten it out (possible with some damping of the underside). Once the Papier-mâché is done, the screws can be removed, and the holes filled in with plaster. Well that is the plan anyway.


I am also building this "Tower of the Inferno". The golden orb is a Christmas decoration, and there is a piece of wood in the core of the tower to give it strength, the rest is card from cereal packers.

Last post I had been experimenting with clay; I am having reservations now. The clay strinks significantly on drying, and if it is on some kind of armature or attached to a base, it cracks. I will continue to play around with it, but it is not as useful as I was hoping.

Monday 11 January 2016

So war-gaming...

My daughter is suddenly into Warhammer. I am not so much into the war gaming, but I do enjoy modelling, and have my own model railway.

So this weekend we started to build some battle boards and scenery.

Battle boards


The battle boards are 4mm plywood. I purchased them from a local timber merchant, as 4' by 8' sheets, and they cut them into 2' by 2' squares. They were actually a few millimeters off perfect, but were a lot straighter then I could do myself.


Action shot with figure:


 I sanded off the rough edges, and painted them with wood primer, which should stop damp getting into them, preventing them warping.


Two of them will feature a river. As that requires depth, the land will slope up to the river, which is not exactly prototypical, but there you go. Here is one, this will feature an island just big enough for one figure to stand on. So far the profile has been defined using strips of card from cereal packets.


At the back, you can just see some grass in the making. the timber merchant were kind enough to give me some sawdust (in fact a bag so big I struggled to carry it). I mixed the sawdust with ready made poster paint to make it green, and in the image above it is drying out.


Scenery Features

My plan for features is to have them free standing, but to leave spaces on the battle board where they can be placed. Each feature uses an old CD as a base, to give it a standard size  and to ensure the base will not warp.

Here are some weird plant-things, made from clay over cardboard tubes, inspired from Morrowind (sorry, out of focus).


The next two are earlier is the process. On the left, a gothic ruin, on the right an orb of power. the orb is a ping pong ball with a couple of LEDs in it.


Here is the gothic ruin with the clay added.