Sunday, February 17, 2013

The making of a tower

I took an oatmeal container and glued spitballs in roughly stonelike shapes. I attached them with a water/Elmer's glue mixture (basically paper mache).

Then I primed the whole thing gray.



 Kind of sloppily drybrushed a lighter gray onto the surface of the stones.

It's a serviceable tower, but next time I'm going to prime it white and paint the stones gray (the lighter mortar will look more naturalistic) and I'm going to make those spitballs smaller and more regularly shaped.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

I have standards

Greetings, small handful of followers. I thought I'd start today's post with some new hoplite shields.

 A short meander and a wine jar.


 An olive branch (no implication of peace in the classical era) and the wheel of legs -- I'll bet there's a name for that design but I do not feel like looking it up.


 Mighty Zeus and a bleating goat.


 What my girlfriend calls the "dancing bull".

Painting hoplites and their shields really does it for me. The challenge of inventing or researching a design and then trying to freehand it and make it look good on a 1/2" area is very stimulating and I save it for last on each fighter, the dessert I earn for painting one of these fellows.

Now for a tougher problem.

I made some standards to play WFB. Warhammer Ancient battles notes that classical Greeks aren't allowed to have standards (because they aren't historically accurate -- phalanx fighters, packed into squares, had neither the ability nor the need to watch the movements of other units on the field and Greeks didn't use such things). Despite the departure from history, I enjoyed the opportunity to envision what a Greek standard might look like. I mounted a couple of iconic classical images on sticks: the head of the gorgon Medusa and the treasure of Colchis, the Golden Fleece.


 I'm fairly happy with my ingenuity on these babies. The fleece is painted fabric (from a fuzzy girl sock) (the sock was fuzzy, not the girl) and a plastic goat's head from a set of farm animals. The gorgon's head is Sculpey and pipe cleaners. It's a good DIY but as my minis get repainted, rebased, and look better and better, the standards are starting to look very DIY. I mean, look at that fleece. It's the side of a bear's hide, not a sheep's.

What I've got to replace them: I picked up a box of fantasy standards on discount.On the larger one, I can mount my greenstuff gorgon's head and just give it a paint job and it should lie at the junction of easy and peasy. The ram's head -- and I really should break out the greenstuff and do it again because my ram's head doesn't look all that great -- would be mounted on the smaller standard and then I might actually flock the smaller standard on one side to give the appearance of wool on one side and tanned skin on the other.

Point of interest: that ungulate head is more of a goat than a ram, since its horns don't wrap around on themselves. You think you can sculpt a ram's head? OK, smart guy. get some clay and twist it into a ram's horn. Easy enough, right. OK, now do a ram's horn that curves in the opposite direction for the other side of the head. Nigh impossible, right? Yeah. If you're right handed it is hella hard to twist clay so that it spirals to the right.
Close up of the head of Medusa, which was damned good for my first flirtation with Greenstuff.

It'll be sad to leave behind my original standards and move towards standards made of more standard wargames modeling materials. I like making odd, outside the box things. But I think if these things are going to look good enough to hang out with my other toys, changes are going to be made, and the plans I have are still going to make use of my artistic talent; it's not like I'm buying a Golden Fleece standard out of a box. Hopefully I will grow to love them. Like the song says, loving (28mm battle standards) is easy if they're beautiful.