Town House WD131

Yet another nice looking house :) Is the roof removeable or is it glued to the house? That might result in different ways of solving the problem with the warping. Anyway, you might be able to hide the warping by adding a thin strip of balsa wood to cover the gap.
 
It is removable. That is why I thought of putting shingles there. Some decorative strip of balsa (similar to the ridge on the first...?) also sounds like a good idea... Thanks for the tip!
 
You're welcome :) I didn't even think of the option of using one similar to the ridge, but that would make a lot of sense, since it would look like decoration.
 

symphonicpoet

Moderator
To borrow a phrase from Papafakis, these are going to be ace when you get them painted! :) Heck, they already are, even without paint.
 
symphonicpoet":19067nqy said:
To borrow a phrase from Papafakis, these are going to be ace when you get them painted! :) Heck, they already are, even without paint.

Thanks, but don't put too much pressure on me ;)





Third house is finished. The major difference to the other two houses is the curved roof. I made a template from cardboad to get the curve as equal as possible on both sides.

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I used 4mm wide beams to make the main 'box' of the building, then used smaller 2mm for the framing in between. The corner beams (4mm x 4mm) had a 2mm x 2mm corner cut out to fit snuggly to the building.

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The door was again carved into the foam.

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The inner removable roof was build from foam and card, the ridge is the other half used on the first house.

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To get an irregular not flat roof, I did not use card to glue the shingles to, but a piece of tissue paper drenched in watered down PVA.

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For another shingle form I used triangle pointed ones on this house.

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Out of a whim I decided to have an overhang on the roof that grows towards the ridge - not sure if I like that or not.

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"To borrow a phrase from Papafakis, these are going to be ace when you get them painted!"

Oh no, I've become boorishly predictable :(

Oh well, I see no point in changing my behaviour. I really, really do think these will look ace.....truly!

Good idea with the tissue technique too. Irregular roofing was all the rage back in medieval times :)

Sent from my SM-N910G using Tapatalk
 

symphonicpoet

Moderator
None less than Eero Saarinen used a similar technique to figure out his roof for . . . I want to say it was the Ingalls Hockey Rink. Crazy curved roof. He took a piece of wet cloth, draped it over a form, and stuck it in the freezer. He did like his curvy roofs, he did. And PVA has some advantages over water in that it remains a solid at room temperature. Anyway . . . good technique!
 
The last house is done.

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* *

I still had to do the business sign on the first house; I decided for it to be a book shop. So I carved an open book from balsa wood and created a chain it could dangle from from copper wire.

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The extra rings I used to embellish the door knobs on some of the buildings.

* *

Here are all four together:

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Painting pending - let's crack on, yeah?
 
Wow, that's an impressive little town you've created there! I am looking forward to see it painted and with some of your minis walking the streets :)
 

symphonicpoet

Moderator
Love the curved roof with shingles on. Love the sign. Yeah, looking forward to seeing this one wander over to the showroom thread. It's the bomb! :)
 
The painting on the first house is done. I started by painting the timbers, liberally overspilling the paint to cover all the gaps between timbering and the house. For this I mixed burnt umber with black. The roof was painted black.

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I then painted the walls in ochre, the windows in black.

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The roof was drybrushed in blues in several stages. Some shingles were left darker, others were hightlighted to quite a light shade. I then used different brown, black and blue washes on different shingles.
Then the whole models was drybrushed in ivory; walls, timbering and shingles.

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To tone down the stark drybrush effect, I applied brown, green and black washes (all from the Vallejo model range) to the model, and applied a final drybrush of very light white to the center areas of the walls.

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After all buildings have been painted, I will apply some flock to represent moss, apart from that the model is done.
 
The painting on the second house is done. The timbers where painted a dark brown. The walls where painted in anthracite grey. The roof was painted black.

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The roof was then overbrushed in dark red, single shingles picked out in lighter red and a few in light red mixed with orange.

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The walls where stippled towards the center with umber green, then more centered white. The timber was drybrushed in two shades of grey. I then applied some washes; finally the roof was drybrushed from bottom to top lightly in ivory.

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As with the first, I will apply some flock to represent moss, apart from that the model is done.
 
Berkut666":14jzssaj said:
Is nice, I like!

All kidding aside, these are very smart

Thank you!




The painting on the third house is done. The timbers where painted a dark reddish brown. The walls where painted in brown. The roof was painted anthracite grey.

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The walls were then overbrushed in brown yellow.

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The roof was washed black, drybrushed in the basecolour. Individual shingles were then picked out in umber green and brown washes.

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Finally, the roof was drybrushed in the base colour highlighted with white. The walls where drybrushed in ivory, then several washes were applied to walls and timbers.

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As with the first and second buildings, I will apply some flock to represent moss, apart from that the model is done.
 
The painting on the fourth house is done. For the stones I used 3 different colours (grey, grey green, light brown), but mixed them as well, for more variety.

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They were then drybrushed in a light grey and all the seams blackwashed. The upper walls were painted in sand colours, the timbers a dark brown, the shingles bordeaux red; all this followed by several washes.

All the windows on the buildings so far were painted just black to keep in line with the style of the old White Dwarf buildings. This looked awful with the panneled shop window, so with that one I used blues to represent glass.

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Finally, the shop sign had the word book written on it.

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As with the first, second and third building, I will apply some flock to represent moss, apart from that the model is done.
 
Houses are done.

The first step in adding moss and overgrowth, was to paint all the sand that got glued to where it wasn't intended to in green, washed brown, and drybrushed in two lighter shades.

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I then used Woodland Scenics

+ coarse turf burnt grass
+ coarse turf medium green
+ blended turf green blend

I glued on the coarse turf, then covered the whole building side in the green blend, to cover all the gaps between the coarse turf and any areas where the glue was applied to sparsely for the coarse turf to adhere.

I think there are a couple spots where I overdid the effect, but all in all I am happy with the result.

Project done :)

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