Cruise speed! I'm almost done with this! Unfortunately I'm not bringing the finished thing today, but we're just this close to it! Let's start where I left last time, the street lamps:
|
Now with posts attached
|
|
Easier to photograph with the lights off
|
The street lights will add some flavour just on top of the bazaar, as well as fill in to some extent that empty area. Now that I have the light garland on the left side of the board, it is time to plan the general shape I want to give it:
|
Just by this pic you can tell it all escaped out of hand (again)
|
|
Step by step! Let's close spaces little by little
|
|
Build, wire, paint, repeat
|
At this stage I had to build, set the lights, close the building, spray over it and keep building. Why couldn't I wait until the end to paint the whole thing? Because I'm planning to have some open spaces:
|
The old trick of printed paper
|
|
This is why I have to paint before glueing the pieces
|
|
Besides, I had to plan the lights in advance. In advance! Madness!!
|
|
I'll have to give a second hand there. Let's hope I can keep the interiors clean!
|
|
Ohhh, more weird shapes! What's going on in here?
|
I added a 3D printed piece I had abandoned in the bits box. At first I thought it was some kind of bank-like armoured door, so I reserved this wall for it. It wasn't until I painted it and the details made themselves visible when I realised it was in fact some kind of power device (and most likely designed to be placed on the floor!!)
|
I don't know what it is, but it works this way
|
With some general idea of what I wanted, I wired the piece:
|
If it looks weird, I'm doing it right
|
Closing this section offered me a number of possibilities. I chose a relatively easy one, just a giant block growing upwards. I made the upper terrace to provide anything interesting to the large shape:
|
Will it be a dock? A garden on the upper town? Who knows!
|
Let's recap and see a few pics of the whole board so far:
|
You can tell the part in which I planned the lights in advance
|
|
It's like Christmas all year long
|
|
Now I can finally envision a glimpse of the final result
|
|
Oh, it all looks tto plain, doesn't it?
|
|
Let's solve it with more printed designs downloaded from the internet!
|
|
Time to add details
|
It's a little challenge every time I have to throw some spray at the thing, as I have to move it all to the window, spray it, let it dry and then get it back into the room.
Of course, every time it's inside, the kids populate the town with literally anything they can find:
|
So they provide me this thriving settlement!
|
I believe that all I've shown could provide a blog post by its own, but the thing is that I've kept on adding stuff, so there's no reason not to show!
First thing, the upper dock. Here you have a mini for scale reference:
|
It's quite an inaccessible dock, but I have plans, trust me...
|
In this pic you can see the handrail. It's but a bbq stick, it couldn't be easier:
|
Dirty tubes are mandatory, you know
|
Seeing how easy was to provide some safety and comfort to my beloved citizens, I made a few more for a few spots where they were much needed:
|
It's all bbq sticks and pillars of foamboard
|
|
But they give a (false) sense of safety
|
|
Now falling dow will be less usual, but more spectacular indeed
|
Let me show the way I'm concealing the batteries. I made this piece as a front cover, which can be retrieved by simply pulling using the ladder:
|
Power grid indicators!
|
Oh, just so you don't have to zoom in, the sign is of course in High Gothic:
|
Like two minutes of Photoshop
|
When in place, the piece looks like this:
|
Who could suspect there's anything behind...?
|
|
Surprise! |
Is this all? NEVER! These have been incredibly fruitful days!
I'm about to close the lower piece, the entrance to the mine itself.
|
This way it looks dull and unimaginative, I give you that
|
|
I hope lights can make it look any better
|
The stairs have a sad, yet unavoidable story behind. They belong to the Genestealer Cult Dungeon I once started building. However, I had to make a hard decision. I really run out of any storage space left at home. In my mind, a full campaign would be comprised by combats on the surface of the mining town and later on taken to the underground tunnels of the mine, intertwined with those excavated by the Cult. However I did it wrong! I started building the Space Hulk-like dungeon before I built the town, and now I reached a point in which I cannot storage any more large structures.
Given that I still must build some stuff for this board (and with any luck run some games on it!) I really didn't see myself using the dungeon in the forseeable future. Then, the pragmatic solution was to dismantle it, release some quite useful space in the cupboard and, when the time comes in a few years, reset the project again.
That means that I'm cannibalising anything I can from that project, which you will immediately see.
I'm building the entrance to the mine. I need some raw rocks and less straight lines. I used these, coming from the Skaven Gnawhole kit:
|
Skaven runes sealed with putty
|
|
Wiring this proved tricky again!
|
|
Caves! Tunnels! Mayhem!
|
|
I'd say that something nasty lives in there
|
The Gnawhole kit also provides some wooden structures, and they look absolutely in place here, so I came up with this:
|
Finished! |
|
There's a little entrance to the left, the main on in the centre and a mysterious cave on the left
|
|
"0 days without accidents". I'm pretty sure the sign isn't really necessary
|
What's in the cave? Hmm, looks like a shrine of some kind, something where the miners can pray when they got in or out the mine. It's relatively hidden, so I guess the local authorities don't usually get a glimpse of what's inside...
|
Hey, that's not the Emperor!
|
Right, it's the Genestealer Venus of Willendorf, which I rescued when dismantling the dungeon. I had to reuse the icaon, there's no debate about thet
|
With some lights on
|
|
There are some devotional prayers, candles, portraits of relatives...
|
If an Inquisitor would ever peep in here, I guess some people would have quite a bad time. Maybe even the Inquisitor...
Ok, I guess I gave you quite a few pics to handle today! Please stay with me, as in a few days (I hope!) I'll provide you with a post having the final details and some elements I deem necessary here.
The end is nigh!
OMG! Looking amazing at now!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm really excited about finishing it!
DeleteAmazing work, I love it.
ReplyDeleteThanks! Seeing the board now, and comparing it with previous stages of development, is quite an experience. It's being quite a journey, and I keep on enjoying every step :)
DeleteAwesome work Suber!
ReplyDeleteThe shrine is a great touch and as you suggest, lends itself to a scenario where the inquisitor visits.
Good to see that your children enjoying playing with it, so it is already a success.
Thank you! Right, having the kids around and seeing them so excited about the board is quite a reward itself, and it's quite encouraging too!
DeleteBreath taking modelling, as ever!
ReplyDeleteAlan Tradgardland
Thank you very much! It's growing in quite an organic way, so I really never fully know what's coming next!
DeleteWow! That is just mind-bogglingly good!
ReplyDeleteBill.
Thank you! It's taking ages, but I refuse to rush any part of the process, the pleasure is just seeing it grow :)
DeleteThis last section of the build has worked out perfectly, and as you already had the lights this time, were able to place them exactly where you wanted. I actually like that all the quarters are not lit to the same extent, it gives it a more real world feel, and adds atmosphere to the seedy less lit areas. All the added details bring more life to the areas, and give it a real lived in quality to the whole build. Can't wait to see what else you have in store before finishing it.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much! I feel quite the same about the lights, I think it provides some sense of credibility, it's part of the organic process. I still have some details to add, but I believe this is pretty much looking like the end of (this part of) the project!
DeleteThis just gets better and better! It's like a 40k/Star Wars remake of Rear Window. So many cool details, and the lights look terrific.
ReplyDeleteHaha, thank you! You made me laugh with that! XD I'm pretty much enjoying these final stages, but I do need some sense of closure by now!
DeleteGreat work as usual, really inspiring to see you making progress on this project. The only question is what next ....
ReplyDeleteThank you! Haha, not even me knows the answer for that!!
DeleteSplendid progress in lots of directions! So close you can smell it!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thank you very much! It's almost finished as I write this, I'll be posting about it shortly!
DeleteFinal details - you almost had me there! Let's face it, you'll be adding to and tinkering with this for ever more ;) Absolutely amazing work and I love how your kids keep filling it with miniatures! So many things to comment and enthuse about - the clever battery storage, the mysterious power generating bank vault door, the recycled Genestealer tunnels and of course the BBQ sticks! Fabulous stuff...
ReplyDelete