1 house in 1 month. A singular task for this distinctive blog.
The one-month deadline comes with Pacificon at the end August where I am putting on several Quar games. I have enough adequately painted figures, so any cool terrain items I can add in the meantime will only enhance the games. Because everyone knows, it's the terrain that really makes the presentation pop.
Also falls nicely with Dave Stone's Terrain Challenge that ends at the same time.
Evolution
Quar Barn - House Scratch Build
First step I drew out some plans on graph paper to get a sense of how things will shape up. and then ignored them. This will create issues later on. I'm gonna build this out of foam because I have a lot of it because somewhere along the road I've become an EPS foam hoarder, and I have a hotwire cutter.
And if I end up hating the whole thing I can just throw it away with minimum loss of materials.
I know I want a little stone foundation, little stonework border to run along the bottom of the walls. to wit, I purchased a little textured roller:
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Which failed utterly. |
While it did make a nice brick pattern in the foam what it didn't do was make that pattern deep enough. I noticed it and thought, "I bet you won't see that pattern with paint on it" and tried an experiment on some foam that you can see below the roller in the picture above. You see the brick / stone pattern in that foam? No you don't. Even if I push REALLY hard on the roller into the foam with as much force as my girly arms could do, the pattern is just not deep enough.
So I scraped the roller and just drew / gouged some stone work with a pencil.
The experience made me look askance as the other things I bought for the project.
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These little windows should be alright.. |
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But the etching on these doors probably isn't deep enough. But still, the doors are door shaped which is the main reason I bought them. So we'll see how they work out. |
After the stonework, I cut out the basic shapes of the walls, and used balsa square dowels for the framing, and cut some holes for the windows. This is the WIP result
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looks like something! |
The walls are 5" high. The short ends are also 5" wide, and the long ends are 7".
The Quar-ky / whimsical element of the build is gonna be a walkaway that leads up the upper floor. The walkway is gonna be 3" high and wraps around the building. To make a 3" high ramp out of 1" foam sheets I made template...
and cut out 3 identical(ish) shapes 1" high.
and then stacked them on top of each other and then shaped the walkway to roughly drop one inch for every 3" in length.
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kinda like that. still needs some smoothing out but you get the basic idea. |
Then cover the walkway with planks and dirt texture.
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Kinda looks like ramp now. |
Back the walls, I then added some watered down wall filler to the blank spaces to mimic the walls having plaster...
Which I am unsure about as I think I missed a step somewhere. I think the idea is to add some texture to the bare foam to mimic plaster but I think the same thing could be of been achieved by just texturing the foam. Plus, it kept getting on the wooden planks try as I might to not do that and clean it up. I gave up in the end. I told myself no one is gonna look that closely as it.
But since I was adding a layer on top of the foam I took the opportunity to leave some areas exposed and scrap in a small brick pattern. The idea being that in places the plaster has fallen away you would see the bare bricks beneath. Though I don't think I sold the effect too well.
Well, now that I have 4 reasonably detailed walls and a ramp, I decide its time to get this more house shaped. I cut out a base from foam, and using a hot glue gun on the low setting glued the house together. I then added stone pillars to each corner (carved out of foam naturally) to hit the ends.
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Like so. House shaped. |
or course, it's not that simple. I can tell with my critical eye where lines were not cut quite straight and measurements were just slightly off, and these little mistakes seem to compound the further along you go.
But it's a experiment. It's a learning process. It's gonna be a big beautiful building. I do feel a little rushed though, with my self-imposed deadline to have this done by the end of the month. Who am I, congress?
Extra Credit
I've given myself extra work. Because I was always a good student. Clash of Rhyfles has an in-game resource called Pluck, usually represented by some tokens. The problem is: a player will keep their unspent pluck in a little pile over here, and when they spend it they'll move a token to a little pile over there. Then 20 mins will go by and the player will go "what's this pile of pluck doing over there? When I keep my pluck over here and then move it back. It's a mess.
So this is basically a fun way to organize Pluck, spent Pluck goes inside a cup, henceforth called a chalice.
The dark ages Quar hero statue I got at a Quar event awhile ago and has just been sitting on my desk. This seems like a fun use for it.
That all seems to be coming together nicely Stew. It is a shame the roller didn't work as the effect looked good. Having to hand-draw and gouge out the stonework is more than my patience could stand.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lawrence. It’s not really so much work or take that long. 😀
DeleteWell, you lost your virginity, but you can now run around town boasting about how you did it in style. Great job on every aspect of the build, it's really very impressive.
ReplyDeleteThanks TP. Like all loss virginity; I think it’s epic but it’s actually kinda basic. 😀
DeleteThat looks great Stew! The stone columns match in with your stone fence pillars and the ramp matches with the trenches. I think a consistent building style will work really well and enhance the Quarishness of it all.
ReplyDeleteA great use of your Quar award as well. Now you can bring it to all your games and just casually mention how you won it for being awesome 😂
Thanks Ben. Yes, the idea is that there will be some common elements with the table to hopefully tie it all together. That, and I really only know one way how to do it. 😀
DeleteLooking more than great sir!
ReplyDeleteThanks Michal. 😀
DeleteOoh, once you start down the path there is no returning. Soon you will building all sorts of stuff. It can become addictive, proceed with caution!
ReplyDeleteThanks Anon. I know right! Already thinking about what could be next. 😀
DeleteVery nice progress, I like the effect of watered down filler and only this morning was reading an article of someone doing that to dress up their MDF buildings. Oddly, I was thinking about your Viking long boats this morning!
ReplyDeleteThanks Norm. Somehow I don’t think I fid the filler right. We’ll see when it comes to painting it. 😀
DeleteI’ve been thinking about the dark ages too since the pillage rules came out.
Great scratch building there Stew:)! Those rollers I think are for use with modelling clay, but I could be wrong. Nice use of the Hero statue too and neat idea for the chalice cups to keep track of pluck etc.
ReplyDeleteThanks Steve. The roller might be. But I don’t see how’d that be useful if the pattern isn’t deep enough for painting?
DeleteThe chalice thing is the easier build. 😀
Nice work Stew....I get what you mean about measurements and/or cuts being slightly off....I generally have that issue, too!
ReplyDeleteThanks Kieth. Glad it isn’t just me. Annoying isn’t it? 😀
DeleteImpressive work on the scratch build. I often have slight issues with measurements being slightly out, but they add to the charm of the building, making it unique
ReplyDeleteThanks Neil. “Unique” is a nice spin. 😝😀
DeleteVery impressive work!
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Bill. 😀
DeleteThat is a big house! Should look great on the table top. Thatch or tile roof?
ReplyDeleteAnd pity about that roller. Would have worked nicely with a caulk mat.
Thanks David.
DeleteYeah, it’s kinda big. I’m telling myself that it’s alright as that makes it more in scale. 😀
Fabulous stuff Stew. I like it when things aren't quite straight or square - it makes them look lived in. Like you I am old school and like the gouged / carved stonework because it gives a less regular look, although sometimes I have to question the sobriety of the stonemason.
ReplyDeletelol. Thanks Mark. Well I don’t feel old enough or experienced enough to be called old school but I do like the old school way. 😀
DeleteFirst off, I resent the insinuation that I'm perverse haha! Secondly, I commend you for trying to scratch build your terrain! I'm not patient enough to go for it but the results speak for themselves. You're already off to an excellent start and its clear that this building is going to be a highlight of your already impressive Quar board!
ReplyDeletelol. Thanks Jeff. I could never be patient enough to master a new paint technique. We’re all just patient for the things we like. Too bad we’re not closer as combined we could be unstoppable! 😀
DeleteYeah, you’ve definitely got a talent for terrain mate. My recent attempts were so bad I’ve just resorted to buying off the shelf stuff (hangs head in shame). Will it have accessible interior spaces by the way?
ReplyDeleteThanks Mark. No, the inside will just be walled off. I don’t have the talent yet for inside. 😀
DeleteYour terrain projects are certainly top notch: worthy of model railroad layouts :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Ed. I wouldn’t go that far. Maybe if my terrain was waaay in the back. 😀
DeleteA great first try at houses, you didn't want to make it super whimsical and go for a house with no 90 degree angles? ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks SD. Truthfully I did wanna do more whimsical stuff but doubted my ability.
DeleteSplendid bit of scratch building, don't think the roller is designed for foam but you've overcome that minor setback,looking excellent!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks Iain. I’m pretty sure the roller was made for foam. I think the EPS foam is too dense.
DeleteLove it mate and am excited to see the finished piece.
ReplyDeleteI am more of a measure once, cut twice kind of person in these type things so I know that my own efforts would be garbage. Kudos to you for having the patience and vision!