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  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 1:00 pm on July 26, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt8 – Hamlet 

    Continuing yet again with medieval dwelings, this is a Hamlet set from a Kickstarter by Ral Partha Europe. It’s 3mm Plywood, the buildings are based, and also have cardstock details. The set included 3 Medium Buildings (a brick and two half timber), a large Cruck house, a Blacksmith’s, a Small Church, and as an Early Bird it also had a Hovel.

    First of all I’d like to say, I was just amazed at the amount of detail these had. They’re so detailed that at times I wished there were instructions, as despite my careful planning, I made some minor errors (one side of the roof of the Cruck house, I didn’t alternate the roof tiles the correct way, and at top the last row isn’t alternated).

    Also Plywood behaves a lot different than MDF, but I hadn’t tried it before. With MDF you had to Glue -> Prime -> Paint. Because it soaks paint (and primer) like crazy and you usually can’t assemble and glue them after paint. With plywood, while it soaks, it doesn’t expand the same way, and it really helped painting the pieces on the sprues before assembly and finishing the paint. This way some hard to reach spots could have been painted better and more easily. I hadn’t realized it from the very beginning so my work was harder at start (and some corners on the interior are not so well painted).

    This ties to my previous point. The details. These buildings have been meticulously planned, and the roofs have got even a plywood beam set to glue the cardstock roof tiles on top. The half timber houses and the Cruck house have cardstock to provide depth for the half timber, and the brick house uses cardstock brick faces to avoid the rough plywood texture or perhaps the over burning of all these tiny etched bricks.

    All the Houses (Brick, Half Timber, Cruck) have removable roofs, and the Cruck house has even got cardstock to show details on the interior. It took me around a week or more to complete the set because as soon as I realized the detail and the proper steps, I slowed down to do it properly and not a rush job.

    So for the Hovel, I went with a simple stone gray and slate tiles. I messed up a tiny bit the washes because I wanted the etched tiles to pop more, so I got some weird effect that I kinda covered it up with drybrushing.

    For the Brick House, I went with red brick and slate tiles. Due to the 15mm scale, the brick mortar doesn’t pop as much as I’d like, but still, I think it gives the effect.

    The blacksmith took me a while to paint as there were a lot of tiny spots in the (quite flimsly if I may add) wooden beams that support it. Blue wooden shingles and gray stone masonry for the furnace.

    Going forward with the half timber Houses, I slowed down a bit and painted the (assembled and glued unfortunately) plywood first before applying the (painted) cardstock. I went with white walls, aged wood (as per my previous posts) and sienna for the ceramic tiles.

    On the Cruck House, I painted everything on the sprues before assembly and gluing. Of course I also painted the sides after removing them from the sprues. White walls, aged wood, and yellow wood shingles.

    Finally, the Small Church. Here I gave it my all. This one had instructions, which really helped, as it also included some points and ideas like adding LED lighting and stained glass. Paul from RPE suggested using coloured acetate sheets, which I don’t have, but I have some hard transparent plastic (acrylic perhaps) which I cut to rectangular shapes, and freehand painted with transparent acrylic inks (red, yellow, blue) with black outlines, and sealed in gloss varnish.

    From my DIY raspberry days I have a set of like 100 cheap LEDs, and after fumbling a bit with resistors and 12V A23 batteries, I found the easy way, described here https://makezine.com/projects/extreme-led-throwies/. However my design is even simpler. I glued a magnet on the wall under each window of the church. The CR2032 battery is magnetic, so I just sheathed it with the correct polarity in the LED, and put it on the magnet inside the church. I have some example photos with the LED lights to show.

    As for the painting part, stone gray with drybrushing, and blue wooden shingles. The door wasn’t etched, and I wanted the wood lines, so I used my hobby knife to do it. Damping the plywood first made it less likely to crack during this process.

    Having gone all this extra way, I couldn’t stop here. I added brick rubbles to the base, dirt, used Sarissa Stencils for some stone floor tiles, and of course rocks, static grass and grass tufts. Washes here and there to give this weathered feel.

    Before closing and continuing with the photos, there’s a couple things more I’d like to share. One is that RPE shared their plans to include them in their standard shop once the kickstarter items are done, so I guess there’s going to be availability.

    Two is my impression and tips with working with Plywood. I loved it way more than MDF. First and foremost it doesn’t have that toxic burning smell that sits in your throat when opening the package and when doing the first coats. Secondly as I said, it behaves better and you can paint on the sprue. Some extra care when removing from the sprue is needed perhaps. Plywood though does have a slight texture, which can be good in some cases, but not desired in others, depending on the purpose of the build. Also washes tend to apply better to MDF, as Plywood will soak them faster due to the more porous and rough nature of the surface. As I paint with brushes and not spray, I found it hard to get the paint into the laser etched parts. What worked was pass the piece quickly with a wet brush, and before it dries, but after it soaks the water in, do the pass with the paint. This helps the paint flow into the nooks and crannies of the etching.

    Now with the photos.

    Hovel
    Blacksmith
    Brick House
    Half Timber House
    Half Timber House
    Cruck House
    Small Church Front
    Small Church Side
    Small Church Rear

     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 1:00 pm on July 25, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt7 – Empire Ruins 

    I’ve gotten a ruins set and several walls and doors and stuff to make my own ruins from Iliada Game Studio. Again, 3mm MDF. These are not based, they included a stone tiles set which I used to base the ruins, and they look great.

    This can work for any medieval or fantasy set, and expands the use case from skirmish gaming even to RPGs., as you can make the ruins open enough to manoeuvre, not just a nice prop on the table.

    To bring the bare stone feel (shades of gray progressively drybrushed) to life, I added spot washes, brick rubbles, rocks, piles of dirt, static grass and grass tufts. All the variety I could think of.

    I really enjoyed putting different types of walls together to make my own ruins, so much that I’m looking forward to trying another one if the future allows.

    Empire Ruins set – front
    Empire Ruins set – Rear
    Custom gate ruin front
    Custom gate ruin rear
    Custom Tower ruin front
    Custom Tower ruin rear
    Custom Wall ruin front
    Custom wall ruin rear
     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 1:52 pm on July 24, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt6 – Village Set 

    Continuing with a Village Set from Iliada Game Studio, across the Aegean, in Turkey. This, belonging to the Kingdom Forgotten range has larger doors, closer to 18mm range, but the difference is not evident between buildings as with miniatures. All my 15mm/18mm buildings fit together on the table fine.

    These are 3mm MDF, very finely detailed, with the roofs on thinner 1mm stock.The set is medieval fantasy, and they have great detail, with separate windows, doors, and big external chimneys. The set includes 2 dwellings, a workshop, and 2 outbuildings that can be attached on the dwellings at whichever side you want for some variety.

    Went with a simpler aged wood approach with brown basecoat, gray drybrush, dark wash and white drybrush.

    Workshop
    Small dwelling
    Large dwelling (with small outbuilding at side covering one of three windows)
    Workshop (rear side showing the large outbuilding)

     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 1:51 pm on July 23, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt5 – Russian Village 

    This wooden cabin style Russian Village set from Red Vectors (Pendraken) is set at WW2. Despite some “clean” lines, it can easily be used in earlier periods, and in fantasy, wild west, or sci-fi and post-apoc as well. It’s 2mm MDF, and the buildings include bases, and the roofs are removable.

    For the aged wood finish, I went with a dark brown base, gray drybrush, brown wash, tan drybrush, and finally a soft white drybrush.

    The set includes 2 houses (small and large), a barn, a stable/workshop and a pig sty. I’m overall very happy with both the designs, quality, and the painted end results.

    Large house
    Small house
    Barnhouse
    Stable/workshop
    Pigsty
     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 8:42 pm on July 18, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt4 – Escomb Church 

    If there’s one thing that’s plentiful in terrain buildings it’s churches. I chose this one from Red Vectors. It’s 2mm MDF, without a base. Under normal circumstances, the roof isn’t removable. I glued it in place.

    The model is based on a true historical church, the Escomb Church. I went ahead and looked it up as a reference.

    I found the etched bricks to be too few as related to the real church, and decided to use my sarissa precision stencils to add more stones using gray paint. Unfortunately, I did this after I had glued the assembled model, so I couldn’t reach some places especially near corners.

    Escomb Church model
    Escomb Church reference photo
     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 8:56 pm on July 17, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt3 – Low Country Cottage 

    Again with a WW2 small house, this low country cottage from Sarissa Precision uses 2mm thick MDF. It has a base, and the roof is removable despite its small size. It is true 15mm scaled.

    I went with a yellowish wall colour and wooden timbers, and a grayish slate roof tile.

    The wooden beams are etched onto the MDF, but painting them requires fine motor skills. Perhaps I should have used masking tape to get cleaner lines.

    This one could also be used for games set on earlier time periods without breaking immersion.

    Low Country Cottage
     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 7:54 pm on July 16, 2024 Permalink | Reply
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    Terrain pt2 – Single Pod 

    Continuing with part two I went with a sci-fi single pod from Warbases‘ Starbase 962 sci fi range. It’s thinner, 2mm MDF, with a base, and the roof is removable too.

    Sports a ladder at the back, a radar antenna at the top and several door hatches and windows.

    One of my first sci fi painting attempts I went with a blue and metallic silver combo.

    Single Pod
     
  • Unknown's avatar

    giorgis 6:52 pm on July 15, 2024 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , TTCombat   

    Terrain pt1 – Townhouse 

    Recently I’ve been spending a lot of time preparing laser cut terrain. While still my latest batch is a Work in Progress, I came to the realisation that I’ve not shared my previous works, at least not in the same manner I’ve done with my painted miniatures. You may have seen them in my various actual plays, but with the exception of some DIY items, my laser cut terrain never got the attention it deserves.

    As you understand this series of posts will be more often as we begin and will slow down as I reach WIP items.

    The first item on my list is a WW2 Town House. I still haven’t worked at all on painting my 15mm miniatures range as I haven’t decided on how to base them, however terrain can be used in a variety of setting and themes. This particular town house from TTCombat could be used in a late fantasy setting.

    It’s closer to true 15mm, so it can be a bit smaller for my 18mm figures, but that’s minor, as the 3mm thick MDF also include a base at the bottom, raising the entire structures height.

    I went with white walls, brown wood windows and red roof tiles. The roof is removable, so I painted the interior gray. However the ground floor is not accessible. I guess it’s meant for WW2 wargamers who place a squad or two inside the roof, essentially declaring that the house is occupied and they’re in cover. It’s not meant for visual realism as much. On the same topic, I can’t think of placing furniture and other items in buildings unless the figures are based on very small bases, prone to falling down, or you’re making a diorama.

    Perhaps I overdid it with texturing the walls with plaster and with the washes, but I think the end result is good enough.

    Townhouse
     
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