A little late this week, between Cub Scouts starting up, PME starting back up, and my mother arriving a day early for her visit it really threw my week out of wack for getting things done. This includes the Painting Guide post which will be out on this Wednesday. I did get in a game of Warlord Games' Test of Honor on TableTop Commander's After Hours Paint and Chat Ep.99 hosted by Rocky's War Room. The game was surprisingly easy to learn, especially online with no rule book to refer to. I had a lot of fun and won the first scenario. Thanks to Matt for hosting and to Bob for being a worthy opponent! I will likely look at picking this up once the Frostgrave campaigns are up and running and my SAGA war bands are completed.
Fantasy:
Here is where the majority of my work this week got done. First up is Duncan's Frostgrave Summoner crew. They have been base coated and washed and now just need some minor highlights and then dull coated.
First up is the Summoner himself. |
The Apprentice bringing forth some extra-planar entity. |
The Captain. |
Sheppard's Garr War Dog from Reaper Bones is in the same state.
War Hound in need of some highlights. |
And I also finished up six large Reaper Bones rats, always useful and playing a role in the first scenario.
Playing the primary antagonist in the first scenario will be the Alchemical Monstrosity, represented by this HD Minis D&D Displacer Beast.
Need to clean up the lines and add some dull coat. |
Terrain:
Dave Graffam is having a sale on his paper craft sets over on Wargame Vault. Most sets are only $1.00! This is a cheap way to quickly get some terrain on the table and add some variety. He has everything from fantasy buildings, medieval buildings, frontier buildings, ships, walls, bombed buildings, floor tiles, and accessories. The first set I printed out and started putting together are the Wooden Crates, which will add more dimension to the Alchemical Workshop in the first campaign and find uses in other scenarios as well. I am using insulation foam to wrap them around for added stability and durability with the kids. After attempting to cut the foam with a hot wire cutter and an xacto knife I found the band saw works just fine and provides the straightest, cleanest, and quickest lines.
The start of my crates. |
So far I have completed a 4x4x2, 4x2x2, 3x3x2, 3x3x1, 3x2x2, 3x1x1, (2) 2x2x1, (2) 2x1x1, and (5) 1x1x1s. I still have (2) 4x1x1, (2) 3xx1x1, 2x2x2, (2) 2x1x1, and (4) 1x1x1s left from the first 15 page printing. The kits look really good, though I will need to invest in some other color sharpies to handle edging as the black is really apparent on the crates, and pretty sturdy on their own when printed on 110lb card stock.
That is it for this week, the painting guide will be out this week and next week will have a terrain tutorial as I finished the painting last night.
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