21/12/2014

For Gondor!

Our little gaming group occasionally do some Lord of the Rings gaming (home brew rules) and if course it's down to me to make the terrain...

I do sometimes hate getting all excited about a new project as it's always me that makes almost everything we fight on lol although to be fair, I'm possibly one of the worst for starting new things.

Anyway, for the LotR games I thought a bit of unseen Gondorian architecture might be nice so I went for a lighthouse or watchtower. I do like the Gondorian style that is seen in the Peter Jackson films and I went down that route.

The watchtower was a fairly generic piece of terrain that wouldn't be to big and could have other buildings added around if needed at a later date.

The base was round and about 150mm in diameter and I ha the crazy idea of building it from individual blocks...




 The blocks were cut from 10mm thick blue foam into 20mm lengths and then rolled in my hands to get a worn texture on them. Various different types were arranged into boxes and then the construction began. The last photo above is of the engineering blocks I use to keep everything straight and perpendicular.




 The walls and buttresses were made in separate sections as it was easier, they were then stuck together to make the basic building shape. Things like the arches were made to suit using the same hand rolling technique to help them fit in with the rest of the blocks.



I had to do a paint test to make surethe colours for the blocks were going to be ok and I got it right first time (with being slightly colour blind this is a good thing). The walls were covered in a simple textured paint first before the colours went on. A very light grey for the base and then a brown/green ink for the wash brought up by a white drybrush. Various shades of ink were used for the weathering.


With the bottom completed I painted it and sorted the base out (impatient I know) and used a few old trees from work, one of which was a poplar which seemed to fit quite well. I put on a few different types of flock and growies for the base to make it look a bit more rugged.





With the bottom done it was time to work on the top. A lift off roof was the order of the day and I thought a little modularity would go down well so the bit that goes on the top could be changed if necessary. Just a simple card construction and a few roof tiles with a wooden floor and a trapdoor. The tiles were painted a dark grey and the wood was done in a grey/brown.






With the roof done it was time to work on the first top portion. As it was supposed to be a watchtower the top needed to be tall but I also thought that a beacon would be quite suitable and so the build got taller...





Quite a simple construction but suited for purpose I think. The top of the tower was quite a simple choice, just a cut stone dome (plastic hemisphere really) stuck on top but the brazier inside took a little more thought and work. It's an acrylic disc at the bottom with styrene strips to form the sides and also styrene around the top to keep it together. Three chains were attached to a hook under the dome at the top. I was tempted to light it with a flickering LED but thought better of it as everything was already built and there would've been nowhere to hide the batteries.







I will still make a couple of extra tops for it, one as a plain battlement and a shorter one than above with a tiled roof and smaller windows.

The only slightly annoying thing is that it hasn't been used yet lol

ttfn

14/12/2014

LotR, but different

In 10mm this time. Yet another project we decided to do and has sort of stalled but we've got enough figures for a couple of small games (if they ever get painted).

Copplestone has been the provider for myself and I chose to go for Mordor orcs. A simple paint scheme of a sprayed brown base coat, a liberal washing of dark brown ink and then details picked out in either one or to highlights.



Characters had a little more time spent on them and I was quite pleased with Saruman of Many Colours (although he has been called Saruman with his technicoloured dream cloak...).





Of course, no project for us is complete with out a it of terrain and given that the figures are more generic and don't follow the Peter Jackson films the architecture could stray form his vision as well. I went for a slightly Mediterranean feel but with a fantasy element added to give it more of a Tolkein feel. I believe his intention for Gondor was somewhere around the med or something akin to Byzantine. What I came up with just felt right.







I went down the laser route for this given the details of the windows and it as simple enough to cut the walls out from card and put them together. The tiles were also laser cut and they might make an appearance in the catalogue at some point.













Simple ground work and a few trees to finish off. I've got a few small holding on the go in a similar vein and when this projet sees the light of day I';; get them out again.

ttfn

11/12/2014

Waylands Bushido board

A couple of years ago I was asked to make a four foot square demo table for Wayland Games as they had started to stock the Bushido range of figures.

Very poor quality progress photos I'm afraid so I'm not going to post any as they don't look good at all and a lot of the details are lost but I will post plenty of the complete board as some of the them almost look real thanks to the sunshine we had at the time the pictures were taken.


















ttfn