Saturday, 23 October 2021

Terrain- Small Park

I've been wanting to include some terrain features on my tables that include some iron railings. I ordered a set of spiked railings from Warbases to try them for size and scale and really liked them. From there, I ordered a few more, plus some of their hooped railings as well. 

I had seven spiked railings, which I wanted to use to make a small park area to position amongst my houses. The railings are 80mm long each, and with a supporting column either side, this allowed me to make a decent sized rectangular space.


The columns and low walls are made from foamboard, coated in filler and textured using my usual set of old brushes to give a stony texture. The tops of the columns are squares of MDF trimmed from spare kit pieces. Grass, tufts and shrubbery are from my usual selections to tie everything in together.

The open space in the centre of the park is there to allow me to place a selection of trees in the middle, depending upon what I want to do. My trees are all based on 60mm round bases, so I envisioned putting three in a row, or two and a monument/ statue/ fountain. Those will have to come later, so for now- trees...


As a little addition- here are a selection of my recently completed civilians/ refugees trailing past the park on their way out of town... The road surface is just a couple of sheets of sand paper, painted grey and textured with pigments, washes and drybrushes. I intend to use inside the yards my high walls will enclose and just generally for any stretch of land that isn't grass of roadway.

Civilians

I've had my eye on some non-coms for a while now to add some interest to my tables and possibly provide an in-game element of randomness, if I can represent civilians decently with rules that aren't too janky or overbearing.

The models I have painted here are a set of Civilians/ Refugees from 1st Corps. This dejected group  comes in a pack of twelve. I've supplemented this with the Runaway Couple pair and the Civilian/ Refugee Cart 2. In my head, I can picture countless WW2 films where columns of displaced families lined the roads or clogged up squares and junctions as armed forces attempted to maneouvre around or through them. 

I've had my eye on these guys for a good while, but have always had more pressing projects to buy and paint to make up my armies and terrain. This was always going to be a nice addition, but never a priority. But then my partner said to me recently, 'Don't you ever get fed up of painting green, grey or brown? What could you paint in different colours instead?' So, I showed her to 1st Corps civilians and a few others, and she very kindly bought the 12 figure pack for me! Now I had no excuse for not getting my other colours out.


To accompany the foot traffic, I've also painted up the Civilian/ Refugee Cart 2 from 1st Corps. I had to fill in a few air bubbles on the resin cart/ luggage (including the lower half of the mother's face), but despite that bit of extra work, I'm really happy with this model.


My Citroen Traction Avant, from Anyscale, has now joined the refugee convoy with the addition of a set of metal luggage from Rubicon Miniatures. The four pieces fit nicely- I was worried the scale, modelling might be slightly off, but everything fits perfectly. Now I need to come up with some rules for these unfortunate guys when finding themselves on a battlefield

Saturday, 9 October 2021

Terrain- Streams (& Culverts)

 After making my rivers, I knew that I’d then want to make some streams using the same principles, just in smaller scale. I was also interested in making a set of culverts to allow the streams to pass under my roadways. I got the idea from a blogger called The Tactical Painter, whose blog you can find here. Using his excellent tutorial as a guide, I decided to make my own culverts, and produce some sections of stream to go along with them. As I set up my stuff to begin, I also thought, why don’t I do a ‘how to’ post into the bargain?!

So here we are, my first How To post. I hope it’s useful!!!

I made the bases for the culverts and streams from the same waterproof tablecloth material that I used for my river sections. It’s hard-wearing and flexible- I like it because it can follow the contour of a gaming table, and will work particularly well for strips such as this. Onto the strips, I glued stones and gravel to mark out the streams themselves.

For the culverts, I cut strips of foam board, which is a material I use a great deal, and carved out an opening to represent the channel in the culvert.


For a bit of variation, I included a small footbridge on one section, constructed from a strip of coffee stirrer and some BBQ skewer lengths. After that, I gave everything with a black undercoat. 


My next step was to add texture to the culverts themselves. I wanted them to be rough stone, so I decided to use the same technique that I’d used to texture the walls of my church. I applied filler to the outside surfaces of the culverts, and then stippled them with an old brush with short, wiry bristles. This produces a nice effect, which I think looks great once painted and drybrushed.


It was then that I realised that I could have waited to do the black undercoat until after I’d applied the filler. Hey ho. I then painted the culverts black once the filler was dry. I took a photo of this, but it’s not a crucial step for me to show you, I think… (Facepalm).

I then moved onto texturing the stones. As with my rivers, I drybrushed these in two stages, followed by an ink wash. First I applied Citadel’s Mournfang Brown, followed by their Xandri Dust. I had given the wooden footbridge a basecoat of Army Painter’s Oak Brown between these two drybrushes, and it too got the Xandri Dust treatment. After that was dry, I applied a good layer of Agrax Earthshade over the whole lot.


The next stage was to paint the culverts. I basecoated them in a grey emulsion I have in a tester pot from a local DIY store. I’ve got several different shades, and any one of them would have done. A couple of coats were applied to get an even colour. 


At this point, I also added tiles to the upper surface of the culverts. These are cardboard tiles that I cut in the hundreds to use as roofing ridge tiles and for the tops of walls, pavement curbs, etc. I knew they’d fit in here. I painted the tiles using Army Painter’s Necromancer Cloak and then drybrushed the whole culvert with Vallejo’s Pale Stone. I tied the two grey colours together with an Agrax Earthshade wash afterwards.


Similar to my model basing, I then painted all grassy areas with a coat of burnt umber. Once dry, I applied grass with PVA, avoiding the gravel and the water channels in the middle. To the water channels, I drybrushed/ stippled a small amount of Vallejo Black Green to add some variation of colour and tie into the watery colour I used for my rivers. (Notice, I also cut away some of the Culvert bases. I did this on a whim, but think I prefer the smaller footprint.)


Once this was done, I decorated each section with tufts and little clumps of scatter foliage. After a spray of matt varnish, the final step was to apple Vallejo Still Water to the water channels/ streams to give them the shiny water effect that the matt varnish would have dulled if I’d done it previously.


Terrain- Small Park

I've been wanting to include some terrain features on my tables that include some iron railings. I ordered a set of spiked railings from...