Tuesday, 28 April 2020

In The Wash

Coming out in the wash

Hi all,
        I mentioned washes in one of my previous posts and thought I would try it out for the first time today. So I grabbed a few models I had been painting on and got experimenting. Some you might recognize from before.I tried a 50 / 50 solution of black paint to water and a really thin solution.

Before






















After.













Vault before.





Fountain after.


Vault after wash and added gold rim around inscription on lid.




Much better, don't you think.




With flash.




















Some of the pictures are a bit dark, I did them again and updated it.

Ivor Cogdell.


Expanding a barricade pt2

Terrain Tweaking

Hi all,
          This is my second installment of terrain enlargement on here. The first part was designing and building a barricade for a fortified position.This installment is probably what I should have done first, which is to mount it on a base. Better late than never, goes the saying.

Tools

A craft knife.
Acrylic paints, brush and mixing tray.
Base board of your choice.
Sandpaper.
PVA glue.
Optional - Flock, foam core stickers, bits of wall or junk pile.


Prepare your material


 Carefully cut down the edges of your board to the required shape, smooth down with sandpaper all over to give adhesion to the paint. Prime the board if needed. Distress the board now if needed. I added in the lines of the path now, but they did not show up very well. Paint the surface as desired. I mixed the pale green and Terracotta for the dry soil and plain Terracotta for the rest. Acrylic yellow for the path.


Add optional terrain pieces. I placed foam core stickers to add an optional pathway and pier bases to the scene, plus a couple of spare wall pieces. Paint the excess glue once they are dry.
.

Add the main terrain piece.


I adjusted the position of the barricade from the original design so that it can be shut or open, sliding left or right as desired. So I now have a checkpoint or a toll booth for the table.


Shut.

Open.
You could add extra junk around the walls to beef them up, but that could block line of sight and give cover to enemies, your choice.


"Who is in charge ?" That's for you to decide and then fight over.

Have fun terrain building, even if they are little bitty things..

Ivor Cogdell


Monday, 27 April 2020

Mucking about (Updated).

Just mucking about

Hi all,
         I have been watching model painting videos over the last few days, apart from doing some artwork and mucking about in the garden, strimming hedge borders one side and hacking through brambles bindweed and ivy on the other. It is looking better, but I pranged my big toe in the process and could not get to the computer, as I needed to keep the foot elevated. Oh woe was me. I made the best use of time by doing a couple of watercolour pictures in the back garden, which I will post here in due course.

Preliminary Sketch "Tree in next door's garden".


"Over the fence 2" - Copyright (C) Ivor Colin Cogdell 2020.

I'm glad to say that it's on the mend now. The Big Supermarkets are quoting a five day wait for deliveries, so I hobbled down the hill to the local corner shop today, only to find out they were shut. I had mixed a day up in my mind and it was Sunday, not Monday, as I thought. Good job I still had tinned stuff in hand.

My lone can of grey primer seems to have gone astray, so I am stuck with continuing with models I have already coated. I may try giving some existing models a wash, a technique I have not tried as yet, so fingers crossed for that. I will report back on the results.

I have also done a few moon shots.

Mel, The Terrain Tutor and myself at Barrage last year.
I also found this of Mel, who hosts the Vlog "The Terrain Tutor". A great guy, as I'm sure quite a few of you know from watching some of his episodes on youtube. or at theterraintutor.co.uk



Taking a stroll in Sutton Park, Birmingham, UK.
This is one of myself, getting some fresh air in a local park

Hi to all of my club mates and net readers out there. Stay in and stay safe.

Regards all,

Ivor Cogdell