Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Friday, 7 February 2014

Warhammer Scenery - Ruined Buildings

As well as painting our Battle Board, we have also recently painted up our selection of Games Workshop terrain pieces. We had one each of the Basilica Administratum, Manufactorum, Sanctum Imperialis and Shrine of the Aquila sets, and had built them pretty much to the template on the front of the box. We'd not painted them for ages, due to not really being able to settle on a colour scheme! Well, fuelled by our success with the board, we decided to get a move on and sort out the buildings, and agreed on an approach to take.

The Basilica Adminstratum
After the seemingly endless job of cleaning off all the mould lines, everything was undercoated in black. The walls were drybrushed quite heavily with a succession of greys (Charadon Granite, Adeptus Battlegrey, Fenris Grey and Astronomicon Grey). All of the gold detailing is done with Vallejo Liquid Gold in Old Gold. Much better coverage than trying to use Citadel metallic paint! All of the skull details on the outside were drybrushed again with Astronomicon Grey.

The Shrine of the Aquila

The floors were painted in one of two ways. The plain metal grate tiles were heavily drybrushed with Macharius Solar Orange, followed by Boltgun Metal, to give us a lovely rusted look. The checked tiles we painted with Mechrite Red and Dheneb Stone. We thought we'd have to do more to it than that, but the finished look with just the basecoat is exactly what we were after! Dheneb Stone was also used to paint the scrolls on the front of the Sanctum Imperialis.

The Sanctum Imperialis

There's still a fair bit of detail unpainted, but for now they are more than good enough for us to use on our painted board. At some point we'll go back over them and pick out all the little details, like the lights inside and out.

Will share the Manufactorum when it is closer to being finished, for now it just has a basic rusty metal thing going on, but none of the details are done yet!

Thursday, 30 January 2014

Warhammer Scenery - Realm of Battle Board

As any hardened war gamer will know, when you first start out with this hobby you're happy to just roll out a mat to play on, and use empty tissue boxes as hills to make it interesting. Then, as you get deeper into it, investing a lot of time and effort and money into your army, spending hours and hours painting your models to get them just right, you realise you ought to be investing a little bit more time in your terrain.

Such was the case in our house. The only real investment we made in our gaming board in the early days was a 6' x 4' sheet of MDF (cut neatly into two halves for ease of storage) and the old Games Workshop battlemat. Not long after, we bought a couple of the hills and some trees. That lasted us for a good few years, but once we'd switched our focus from Warhammer Fantasy Battle across to Warhammer 40k, we decided the lush green battlefield we had didn't really cut it for the gritty battlefields of the 41st millenium!

It was about the same sort of time that Games Workshop brought out the Realm of Battle board, so after much debate, we eventually invested in one. It was left unpainted for quite a while, as we couldn't decide how to do it. Plus, a lot of our models were unpainted as well, so it didn't seem out of place to be playing on an unpainted board. More recently, however, we've found ourselves able to field almost full armies of painted models, and the unpainted scenery was starting to jar a little. So back in October we decided to start painting it.

We spent ages online looking at the various different ways people had painted theirs. We eventually decided on a brown colour scheme, a sort of desert(ish) wasteland theme. We did the base layers, but then it sat half painted for a couple of months while we figured out how to finish it off. A couple of weeks ago, we sat down in front of the telly and got out the paints again, and after several hours of endless drybrushing, it is now almost complete.


It makes such a difference having it properly painted. It's not quite finished, as we still need to varnish it and finish off the skull pits with water effects. So it's currently living on the dining room table, as we can't put it away until we've protected the paint job.


It was a bit of trial and error to get the colour scheme to work, but here's a run down of how we did it in the end.

1. We basecoated the entire board with black paint (we used a spray can of black we bought in Wickes, as it was slightly cheaper than the Games Workshop Chaos Black spray), and then sprayed the whole thing brown, leaving the exposed rock edges black. The brown spray we used was from Halfords, their own brand Camouflage Spray Paint in Brown - ultra matt. Lovely coverage - we used about one and a half cans for the whole board.

2. The rock sections were all painted with Adeptus Battlegrey from the Citadel foundation paint set.

3. Rock sections drybrushed with Astronomicon Grey from the Citadel foundation paint set.

4. The brown areas of the board were drybrushed with yellow acrylic paint. Rather than use up the expensive-in-large-quantities Citadel paints, we bought a tube of Galeria acrylic paint from Hobbycraft in the colour Yellow Ochre. Using 1" flat brushes, we managed to do all six panels in less than the running time of Man of Steel. The skulls in the pits were heavily drybrushed with Bleached Bone Citadel paint, then two layers of Thraka Green Citadel wash was applied. We still need to go back over them and drybrush the very top edges with Bleached Bone, before filling the pits with Woodland Scenics Realistic Water.

5. The skulls and bones found in piles around the rocks on the board were painted with Bleached Bone, and then washed with Agrax Earthshade Citadel wash.

The craters (set from Games Workshop) were painted to match the battleboard. Undercoated in black, sprayed with the same brown spray and then heavily drybrushed with the yellow ochre. To define them a little more, we chose prominent sections of the crater edges and drybrushed them as rocks, using the same combination of grey paints as above. We then went over them with Scorched Brown Citadel paint, drybrushing inside the craters to darken down the interior of the crater.


To properly see how it looked, we set up a mock battle on the board using only fully painted models. It's a bit one sided, as we have painted far more Chaos Space Marines than we have Imperial Fists!


I still have a fair few bits of scenery work to do; I've got some homemade pieces that haven't been painted yet, and I need to sort out the bases for my Imperial Fists and that second Heldrake. The buildings already on the board in the shot above are not quite finished either, lots of little frustrating details to do, but I will share progress on those so far in another post.

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Cake painting

Before the last LARP event, I decided I was going to decorate a cake for an IC coronation we were planning. The faction I am now part of is big on heraldry, so it was an easy decision to make to create a cake adorned with the heraldic device of the kingdom we were holding the coronation for. Unfortunately, the in game heraldry was not designed particularly well, so I had some pretty tough source material to work from.

The shield of Essex

I spent ages thinking about the best way to achieve this on a cake. I settled in the end for airbrush food paint, as I thought stencils and using Jamie's airbrush (that we bought for painting 40k models!).



Our first experiments with the airbrush didn't go so well. The paint transferred onto the icing alright, but I couldn't get crisp edges from my stencils, and the risk of the red and blue bleeding into each other and making a horrendous blackish-purple was too high. In the end, I settled for painting by hand.


I decided to do two cakes, as the only pre-iced cakes I could find were quite small. This Lion is one I found in a Google image search, which co-incidentally turned out to be exactly the same one as the previous Kings had used as their symbol and was all over banners all over the camp! It took a couple of coats of the food paint to get a good clean covering, but it was worth the effort.


I failed to get a picture of the finished cakes. The Essex cake had "Long Live the Queen" iced around the edge, and the Lion cake said "We Shall Not Falter".

I was so pleased with how they turned out! And everyone at the event said such nice things about them. I have already started planning my second attempt at cake decoration.


I'm going to do a much bigger one this time, with all ten shields on it. Some of them have quite intricate designs, and they will be smaller than the one I made (only 3 inches tall) as they will be adorning the side of the cake rather than the top. I've found a decent sized iced sponge cake on the Waitrose website, which I will be ordering as soon as the date for the banquet is announced! Watch this space!

Monday, 11 July 2011

More Photography fail

You'd think a campsite full of people in silly costumes would be an ideal place to get a photo of the week for my 52 week long photo challenge. Unfortunately, I am utterly useless, and didn't take a single photograph all weekend. Too busy getting stuck in and having a whale of a time! If and when photos of me in kit appear on Facebook, I will share them with you!

Now the event is over, I can share pictures of the prop I was helping Jamie to make. You'll remember the dragon I painted onto a piece of wood? Here is the finished item it was painted for:

We varnished over the painting, which adorns the top of this wooden cage. The box is supposed to contain a baby mountain lion, but rather than go for a stuffed toy inside (which would look a bit rubbish), we put thin crepe paper around the inside of the box, and inserted a black cardboard silhouette shaped like a baby mountain lion. When light shines through the box, you see the shadow of the cub inside.

meow?
 I had a small happy moment when I saw the item in play, but I didn't get a chance to ask anyone about it while I was in character, which is a shame, as I don't know how well it was received. Jamie assures me it was all very cool, anyway, so I guess it worked as expected!

So, no crazy LARPing photo for my photo of the week this week. I will have to think of something before Friday! Pictures for last week were also thin on the ground, as prep for the event sort of took over. Luckily, I had taken a couple of shots of the sweet pea that takes over the front yard each year once the nettles die back, so I do still have a photo for the first week of July.

Sweet Pea flowers


Friday, 8 July 2011

FO Friday - the Super Seekrit edition

We recently celebrated a friend's birthday, so now I can finally share the presents I made for her! I first had the idea to do these back in May; after a week of having the patterns sitting in my Ravelry queue I just had to start working on them.

Of course, as Em is on Ravelry as well, I had to be sneaky about it! I set up my project pages, so I could have someplace to record how much yarn I used, and what dates I made them over, but didn't add any details on what pattern it was or anything. I set them to hibernating so they'd most likely appear right at the bottom of my project list, and not be noticed. And I made a project photo picture that says "Ssssh! It's a secret" just to get the idea across!

But, now they have been gifted and well received, I can share them with you! There are actually 4 of them, but only two were for Em. The other two were half practice-goes, half I-really-want-one-too.

Super Seekrit Project 1, aka Yoda for me

Super Seekrit Project 2 aka Yoda for EmmyLou

Pattern: Yoda - Star Wars Mini Amigurumi by Lucy Ravenscar (direct link to etsy shop listing)
Yarn: Sirdar Bonus DK
Hook: 3.5mm
Additional Materials: 2x 8mm safety eyes (each), fibrefill stuffing

This pattern is awesome. As written, you get the original Yoda with the pale brown belted robe (project 1), plus additional instructions for creating a more traditional looking Yoda in a dark brown outfit with pale brown hooded robe. Lucy's instructions are very clear and well laid out, I had no trouble at all putting him together.

This was my first experience using safety eyes, though. I did a bit of searching to see if there was a trick to getting them on, but it would seem not. If your fingers aren't in complete agony by the time you hear the little click, you're not doing it right! I actually had to get Jamie to help me on these two.

When it came to deciding which one to give Em, quite clearly it was going to be Yoda number 2. I think he looks awesome. Plus, the robe, totally comes off. You can dress and undress him! Not sure why you'd want to, but anyway.... moving on..

Super Seekrit Project 3 aka R2-D2 for me

Super Seekrit Project 4 aka R2-D2 for EmmyLou

Pattern: R2-D2 - Star Wars Mini Amigurumi by Lucy Ravenscar (direct link to etsy shop listing)
Yarn: Sirdar Bonus DK
Hook: 3.5mm
Additional Materials: 2 x 10mm safety eyes, 1x 8mm safety eye (each), fibrefill stuffing

This one was a little trickier, because in order to have poseable legs, you have to attach them to the body with safety eyes forming the joints. Cue more cursing and screaming in pain as we tried to get them to attach! I decided to test the pattern first by making myself a proper blue R2 unit. This pattern is awesome. It's so quick, and so easy, and so clever. By the time I was done with my R2, I couldn't wait to get started on Em's.

The second R2 unit is green, because in a recent weekend Star Wars roleplay game, Em played a green R2 unit, and I wanted to make a mini ami of her character. This appears to be a tradition Jamie and I have now started, as last year we made a diorama depicting her Dark Heresy character casually blasting her way through an industrial landscape with her custom multi melta:

Not the best photo we have of it; when I have time I will hunt
through my PC and find the better ones.


Click the banner to see other FO posts!


Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Inspired by others

When I started this blog, my vision was to post all sorts of exciting things about all of the crafts that I enjoy. Over the last two months, however, I've got so enthusiastic about crocheting that I've not really done much else in the way of craftiness, so have little to post about.

In an attempt to live up to my claim for being a jack of all trades, I am going to share with you some of my older work in other crafty areas. Hopefully, this will provide the much needed kick up the bum to get me crafting in other ways again. I must confess, this post is wholly inspired by a similar post over on my friend Ro's blog.

I've never claimed to be a great artist, but I do enjoy picking up a pencil or paintbrush every now and again. It runs in the family - my maternal grandmother, great aunt and great grandfather were all painters. While I'm not great on doing original pieces, and my composition sucks (I don't do backgrounds, generally), I do well copying images.


I am very fond of Winnie the Pooh!



Alongside Pooh and his friends, I have turned my hand to other cartoon characters. I don't think I've got them all scanned in, and a lot of them are in a box in the attic at the moment, but when I was at university I decorated my room door with loads of these little cartoons.



Occasionally I try and draw more serious real-life things. I'm not always convinced I do a good job. This drawing I did not long after its subject passed away:



This is Mitzi, she was almost fifteen when she was put to sleep, on the day after Boxing Day.

I've done paintings too, but not very many. Gran taught me to paint with watercolours, this is the most complex thing I did.


It's a copy of an oil painting by Cezanne called Mountains in Provence. His is much better than mine, of course.

I'm sure I've got some more recent work lying around the house somewhere, it just doesn't seem to have made it into the scanner yet! I will have a scavenge and see what I can find.

Saturday, 1 January 2011

Twenty Eleven here we come

I guess it's tradition, to make resolutions on the first day of the year. This year I'm going with something slightly different (for me at least). Crafting goals!

I am realistic enough to realise that I cannot possibly hope to focus on everything in the year ahead, so I am going to have to relegate some of my hobbies to the back shelf once more. Some things are unfortunately more important than others, and as one of my main goals this year is to qualify as an accountant, I need to ensure I have enough time available for studying and revision. So some of my hobbies are going to be (once again) relegated to the back shelf and put aside. Drawing, painting and any ambitions I had towards learning a new instrument will all have to wait for another year.

The year will be no fun, though, if all I do is work and study. So at the very least, I shall attempt to complete these modest goals:

Photography
These goals have already been outlined in a previous post, but I will list them again for completeness:
  • One picture a week for a year
  • One picture for each season
  • One picture a day for a month
  • Object photo challenge
Knitting/Crochet
  • Finish my current WIPs before starting anything new (the tiger, clownfish and rectangle granny, specifically)
  • Crochet my first item of clothing, potentially this top I found on Ravelry
  • Make gifts for friends currently expecting babies (bit of time pressure on this one, as baby 1 is due fairly soon, and baby 2 is due in May). I suspect the pale yellow yarn I was given for Christmas will come in handy for this!
  • Learn more "advanced" knitting techniques. At the moment I can do a basic garter and stocking stitch (and I did one lace scarf that had YO and knit2tog) but I've seen some lovely knitted patterns on Ravelry that I'd love to have a go at which I suspect require me to be a bit more competent. Something like this, or this.
  • I'd like to add in some sort of crochet X number of Ys but I have no idea what that would be. Maybe a new amigurumi a month or something?
Painting Warhammer Miniatures
An element of my craftiness not yet explored by this blog, but something that I love doing but did far too little of this year. So to compensate, here are some targets for me to hit over the next twelve months:
  • Finish painting my High Elf Bloodbowl team. They've been half painted for about a year now, so it's about time.
  • Convert and paint some of the individual star player models we've had planned for ages.
  • Base every single model that gets painted in this house. I want to be able to say, on 31st December 2011, that there is not one single miniature in this house that has been painted but is still standing on a bare base.
  • Make a decent go at painting my Orc army. Ok, I probably won't get the whole thing done, as there's something like 150 models at current count. I'll do a post in a few days and elaborate on this, as I need to sit down and go through the army and see what is what,
Making Music
So I've put learning the cello on the back burner for another year, but I am rather determined to let 2011 be the year I finally get back into the habit of playing the piano. To do this, here are some goals;
That's probably enough to be getting on with. After all, I still need to leave time for things like roleplaying, climbing, swimming, cycling and hiking! I'll try and keep you all updated with my progress!

Happy New Year!
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