Saturday, September 23, 2017
Dice towers
One of the perks of moving into a new (for me) house, is having a little extra space. I have a little space to do some woodworking. So, of course, the first thing I made were these dice towers and tray. The tower to the left is solid (non-foldable) but has some character; the staining didn't go as planned, but it looks old and distressed -- at least in person.
The larger tower has a lot of baffles inside, and gives the dice a lot of action, taking almost one full second for the dice to reach the bottom (that doesn't sound like a long time, but it is. Is it?)
As a perk, in using standard wood sizes (I wanted to cut as little as possible), the tower and two dice trays really did fit together like that. I shit you not :)
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Zombicide Black Plague: STILL not done
I've had quite a few survivors painted -- more than enough to play -- but after introducing Elizabeth to the game, she warmed up to quickly to the gameplay. This inspired me to paint a few more survivors. So here they are along with a few notes and random information.
I still have a score or more of survivors left to paint, but these represent the last of my "favorite" survivors. Elizabeth and I even like to make our own custom characters to take to war against the zombies (that's while you see the random Conan and Bossonian archer figure among the photos below.)
The Critchlow box didn't interest me at first, and then I finished painting it, and now it's one of my top two (along with the Adrian Smith box) |
The Gipi box was my early favorite. Not much anymore, but still great figures. Celia, though, is a great character to have in a game (she comes with heal, I think.) |
Most of our "armored" survivors themed team. Mostly figures from Jovem Nerd, plus Mizar from the Bonner box. |
I don't own Heroquest, but I own Zombicide. These are various pieces from Conan and Reaper. We actually don't use the chests anymore as objectives, instead using the furniture as themed objectives. We have house rules on how to use these (including when there are hidden colored objectives,) but it's too long to explain here; I just wanted to show off all our fun scenery -- and Blackheart the wizard. |
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Conan
The basic heroes. Don't tell the Cimmerian I called him basic. |
A princess alongside Baltus and his companion, Slasher. |
Pict hunters. I paint the bases instead of using the "clip-ons" to reduce wear and tear. |
I don't remember if I need these for the first scenario or not, but I painted them nonetheless. |
Hyenas, though, I can't remember where they were in the Conan stories. |
Of course, you'll need Zogar Sag to unite the clans. |
A mainstay of Conan's world: The giant snake. |
Sunday, September 17, 2017
Where I've been (Plus: Tokaido!)
The short version
Met a woman. Moved in with her. We paint, we game, we love.
Long version
My prolific blogging on the past stemmed from the fact that I had a dedicated space for photographing completed minis. My girlfriend (her name is Elizabeth) will let me have that space in our home, but with all the new distractions (we love to play board games together!) I just hadn't gotten around to setting it up. I did have the day off and took some photos of a few projects completed in the past few months (not a lot of figures from what I'm used to, but the painting slowly but surely continues.) So I'll be putting together a few posts over the next week catching you all up to at least my more recent projects.
By the way, I do get email notifications if anyone comments on my blog, so I still reply to questions and queries here, so feel free to comment on anything on the blog, no matter how old the post; I'll see it :)
One of the wonderful things about Elizabeth is her willingness to take on new creative hobbies. I introduced her to minis painting, and the first thing she painted were most of these figures for Tokaido. I had intended to paint most of them, letting her choose two or three favorites to paint, but she ended up painting a lot of these while I was at work. It was a pleasant surprise to see her progress through these.
I prepared the figures the same as I do for all plastic figures: Prime with Army Painter (I prefer black), brush on a layer of black craft paint (Delta Cermacoat) to add some tooth and to provide an easy-to-see matte surface, paint as usual. We used the character cards from the game for reference and painted the figures using those colors. The figures turned out great and really take on a quality that fits the look of the game. Elizabeth did great.
We're both looking forward to the soon-to-be-released Matsuri figures for Tokaido -- another set of 16 figures. I expect Elizabeth will paint most of those, too. I have no problem with that :)
By the way, here's the new set-up. Still much the same, and nice and cozy:
Met a woman. Moved in with her. We paint, we game, we love.
Long version
My prolific blogging on the past stemmed from the fact that I had a dedicated space for photographing completed minis. My girlfriend (her name is Elizabeth) will let me have that space in our home, but with all the new distractions (we love to play board games together!) I just hadn't gotten around to setting it up. I did have the day off and took some photos of a few projects completed in the past few months (not a lot of figures from what I'm used to, but the painting slowly but surely continues.) So I'll be putting together a few posts over the next week catching you all up to at least my more recent projects.
By the way, I do get email notifications if anyone comments on my blog, so I still reply to questions and queries here, so feel free to comment on anything on the blog, no matter how old the post; I'll see it :)
TOKAIDO
One of the wonderful things about Elizabeth is her willingness to take on new creative hobbies. I introduced her to minis painting, and the first thing she painted were most of these figures for Tokaido. I had intended to paint most of them, letting her choose two or three favorites to paint, but she ended up painting a lot of these while I was at work. It was a pleasant surprise to see her progress through these.
I prepared the figures the same as I do for all plastic figures: Prime with Army Painter (I prefer black), brush on a layer of black craft paint (Delta Cermacoat) to add some tooth and to provide an easy-to-see matte surface, paint as usual. We used the character cards from the game for reference and painted the figures using those colors. The figures turned out great and really take on a quality that fits the look of the game. Elizabeth did great.
We're both looking forward to the soon-to-be-released Matsuri figures for Tokaido -- another set of 16 figures. I expect Elizabeth will paint most of those, too. I have no problem with that :)
By the way, here's the new set-up. Still much the same, and nice and cozy: