Well Livery Stables actually but let’s not split hairs. I’m calling this build finished. Internally I added stalls to give cover and outside I have added some scatter terrain in the shape of straw bales (well a horse gotta eat).
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The roof tiles before painting
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The roof was covered with home-made shingles (timber tiles if you haven’t come across the term before). These were cut from cardboard as short strips with some irregularities in the tile lengths to create a nice visual effect. I used a grey card and then painted it yellow ochre using Windsor and Newton galleria artist's acrylic paint. Over that I painted a thinned Burnt Umber which I immediately rubbed off with tissue paper. This darkens the yellow ochre and creates areas where lighter paint shows through, creating a worn creosote effect. The topmost roof I did more to, but I decided that less is more and didn’t replicate the effect lower down.
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And after
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I then started on some scatter terrain items. First up are straw bales. These are simply blocks of balsa painted yellow ochre with finely chopped sisal string glued all around. I also intend added sisal ‘straw’ into the stalls inside the stabling. The stalls themselves are bass wood with matchstick bracing.
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A few straw bales around the place add character (and cover) |
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With the roof off you can see the stalls I added |
I have started some extra scatter terrain using DAS airdrying clay. These will be a pile of loose straw and some bags of grain. I'm just waiting for the clay to dry and harden at the moment to see if these have come out OK. I am going to need more 'straw though, so you will have to excuse me as I need to nip off and start trimming sisal string into 28mm straw stems!
Fine looking real estate!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jon
DeleteVery very nice. Seems all the cool kids are doing Wild West stuff at the moment.
ReplyDeleteThanks JBM the MDF kit was a much easier build than the scratch builds. I can take the extra time saved to add some extra details if needed.
ReplyDelete