With Roll Call and Patras both coming up in the next couple of weeks, a man's mind turns to what things are possible to do on a wet Bank Holiday Monday with 2mm mdf, some builders sand, glue and a tin of Rustin's Wood Dye (sometimes known as "Wood Stain" .. presumably if the marketing department don't get to it first).
And.... the answer is a 25mm ADLG area of brushy ground, and a 15mm ADLG marsh.
Very simple construction indeed - the base is simply 2mm MDF sheet, cut square and then the corners trimmed off to make it a tad irregular. The whole thing is then sprayed dark green (a cammo green spray from Halfords wouldyabelieveit!)
Wood glue is then smeared on where you want the "land" to be, spread about with a knackered brush and then builders sand is poured on top. Leave it to dry for a little while, and then stain the sand areas by roughly painting on Rustins Wood Stain (or similar).
Once that had dried thoroughly (and in a well ventilated place as it kinda stinks), gloss varnish the "green" bits of murky water, and add some grass and grass tufts to the thing to set it all off.
I'm sure there are cleverer ways of doing this, but I'm quite happy with this as the fruits of my own rather half-hearted labours...
A larger area of "brushy ground" is basically the same idea but the base colour here is just the natural colour of the 2mm MDF (no spray), and the whole thing has been painted in Wood Stain, left to dry and then gently drybrushed.
If you paint it, the wood stain doesn't really sink in - I have however done "lighter" spray version of these in the past, such as for the baseplate to the Samurai Village.
While I was in a terrain-making mood, I also rebased some of my collection of palm trees onto larger, multiple bases.
This has become my go-to technique for trees, having given up on single-based ones as hey fall over - although I may be over-egging it a little to describe putting 2-3 trees on one base as a "technique"(?).
These are palm tree cake decorations - they have the twin advantages of being cheap, and very flexible so they won't break if you drop them or squish them in a tin for transit.
Showing posts with label terrain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label terrain. Show all posts
2 Apr 2018
22 Feb 2018
15mm Samurai - and Samurai Terrain as well
A near-unique event today, as I post pictures of an army that I haven't painted myself... but don't worry, the usual bog-standard finishing is then in evidence with some bodged-together and over ambitious terrain !
The army is a 15mm Samurai force for L'Art de la Guerre. Mostly composed of Old Glory figures from Timecast, they are supplemented with a handful of Baueda Emeshi cavalry and a Dixon 28mm Great Commander.
All of them have been painted by Lurkio
The Samurai Village has already been posted online but this time there is also a self-made "ADLG Waterway" Samurai Castle wall to marvel at the amount of spare time I have to do stuff other than paint figures !
The Walls come with a walk-through construction guide as well.
The army is a 15mm Samurai force for L'Art de la Guerre. Mostly composed of Old Glory figures from Timecast, they are supplemented with a handful of Baueda Emeshi cavalry and a Dixon 28mm Great Commander.
All of them have been painted by Lurkio
The Samurai Village has already been posted online but this time there is also a self-made "ADLG Waterway" Samurai Castle wall to marvel at the amount of spare time I have to do stuff other than paint figures !
The Walls come with a walk-through construction guide as well.
Labels:
15mm ancients,
badcon,
L'Art de la Guerre,
painting,
samurai,
terrain
28 Jan 2018
A Samurai Town for L'Art de la Guerre
With my first-ever "I paid someone to paint it for me" army of Samurai currently on the basing table with Simon from Lurkio, I've been preparing some suitable terrain to go with the army for use at Badcon in a few weeks time.
First up is a small town, which has an extension to it;s base to make it a maximum sized piece for a 300 point game as well as the core 200 point version.
All of the buildings are from Oshiro Model Terrain, painted by me with a black undercoat and then drybrushed Army Painter Leather Brown for the wood, and white for the panels. The trees come from Model Tree Shop - a little more expensive than usual, but they do need to be as good as the houses.
Look carefully and you may see that the pond has some Koi carp painted in it.
The terrain cloth is from Tiny Wargames
All of the buildings are just placed on the mdf baseplate, which has had some sand glued to it, a spray coat of ArmyPainter Desert Yellow followed by a dusting coat of Skeleton Bone.
And, of course, the trees are also held in place with rare earth magnets. Because, well, why not go the whole hog eh?
The smaller section turns the main 200 point baseplate into a 300 point sized terrain piece, and with all of the pieces able to be taken off, it now works for the game as well as aesthetically.
I did need to drybrush the cherry blossom tree as it was a bit violently pink when I got it originally.
And, here are the men who will defend it...
First up is a small town, which has an extension to it;s base to make it a maximum sized piece for a 300 point game as well as the core 200 point version.
All of the buildings are from Oshiro Model Terrain, painted by me with a black undercoat and then drybrushed Army Painter Leather Brown for the wood, and white for the panels. The trees come from Model Tree Shop - a little more expensive than usual, but they do need to be as good as the houses.
Look carefully and you may see that the pond has some Koi carp painted in it.
The terrain cloth is from Tiny Wargames
All of the buildings are just placed on the mdf baseplate, which has had some sand glued to it, a spray coat of ArmyPainter Desert Yellow followed by a dusting coat of Skeleton Bone.
The smaller section turns the main 200 point baseplate into a 300 point sized terrain piece, and with all of the pieces able to be taken off, it now works for the game as well as aesthetically.
I did need to drybrush the cherry blossom tree as it was a bit violently pink when I got it originally.
And, here are the men who will defend it...
Labels:
L'Art de la Guerre,
samurai,
terrain
9 Oct 2016
Horizon Wars!!!
Yes, Osprey's new "skirmish+" scale Sci Fi rules have finally proved to be the justification for all of the mad mini-mechs and stuff you will have seen creeping, scuttling and hovering onto this website in recent months with no real purpose.
As classic wargamers, the first on-table test of the rules involved bespoke terrain, and far too many figures and pieces to be sensible - but hey, what's a tentacle between friends eh?
This 1-page match report features hordes of pictures, legions of inappropriate video clips, some rules hints and a little bit of a glowing review at the end (and a glowing nuclear reactor in the middle too).
It also features snippets of back-story embedded throughout the report - something not really previously necessary in historical gaming reports!
See how the battle-bots do in the first of what may well be several more outings for the SF wonderkids in Horizon Wars, The Beginning
As classic wargamers, the first on-table test of the rules involved bespoke terrain, and far too many figures and pieces to be sensible - but hey, what's a tentacle between friends eh?
This 1-page match report features hordes of pictures, legions of inappropriate video clips, some rules hints and a little bit of a glowing review at the end (and a glowing nuclear reactor in the middle too).
It also features snippets of back-story embedded throughout the report - something not really previously necessary in historical gaming reports!
See how the battle-bots do in the first of what may well be several more outings for the SF wonderkids in Horizon Wars, The Beginning
Labels:
1/300th,
10mm,
batreps,
battle report,
Horizon Wars,
match reports,
robots,
Sci Fi,
terrain
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