Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Wall

What did I get done last night? I assembled another wall. Actually, I also painted a couple of miniature ships for another game system entirely but we're concerning ourselves with 40K here so that other stuff doesn't matter. I also have to ask your forgiveness for the photograph. I took a picture of the wall I made last night, but I don't have it on hand for this and since one wall looks remarkably like another wall, I decided to recycle a wall pic. Consider me properly castigated. I'll never do it again. :)

I'm thinking about a quick little project. I was reading an article from some women's magazine about interesting lighthouses and the shape of one caught my eye. It was something easy to do with foamcore and I envisioned it more as the base and column of some kind of memorial or statue. Recently I made a memorial out of a Black Reach Captain (I've got 3 or 4 I'll never use for play), a dice box (you know the ones that dice bricks come in) and some Basilica buttresses all mounted on a CD (good use for coasters). Well, a CD is just a bit smaller than 5x5" (120mm or 4.72") so if I made this base column that's based on this lighthouse, it'll be just the right size to top with this statue. It's also a good reason to make more statues (besides the fact that more and varied terrain is always good).

As a side mention to the foamcore design tutorial and because this entry made me think of it, here's something to think about. Of course you need graph paper to design your buildings. Well, you don't NEED it, but it helps a lot. But 8.5x11" graph paper isn't suited for bigger things which you'll probably eventually want to make. You could make lots of smaller pieces and put them together to make something bigger, but sometimes you want a big facade for a building or something similar. Trust me. Those city walls? The factory? I didn't do them on normal sized sheets. Go out to an art supply store (or, in my case, local blueprint company) and you'll find graph paper pads that are 11x17". They're obviously a little more expensive, but when you want to do something big, they can't be beat. If you're going to make a lot of buildings, it's a good investment if and/or when you decide to go bigger.

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