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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

More Kandahar Game Progress - post #5

Greetings fellow Hobbyists!

I hope as you read this you and yours are safe and sound, healthy and whole.   I also hope you've been able to keep your hobby life alive, albeit probably in a more lonely manner than usual.  On one hand the isolated nature of life these days completely wrecks much if not all of what we love about wargaming -- namely, the social element and all it entails, from camaraderie to competition.  On the other hand, it presents many of us with more time cooped up at home, at least some of which can be spent reducing the size of the proverbial lead pile -- prepping, painting, basing and terrain-ing figures; building tabletop terrain; researching historical scenarios and orders of battle; maybe even play-testing, so long as there's another wargamer at your place, or if you can pull it off "remotely" via social media or Zoom or lots of text messages, or if you're up for some solo gaming where you role-play commanding each side in turn.

So our games are dead in their tracks... except for the ones we're working overtime on.

For me, as some of you will know, that game is a refight of the 1880 Battle of Kandahar.  On that front I'm happy to say I've made some good progress, though I still have a long way to go.

Since my prior post I have:

(1) Built the form of MIRZA/MURCHA/MARZA KOTAL.  This was a challenge but I think it turned out pretty well.  Next comes gluing some some ground-cover ballast, same as I still need to do for the more modest BABA WALI KOTAL.  Then they must both be painted.  That's still a lot to do but it's all easier and less time-consuming than the building process which is now thankfully completed.

(2) Did some final tweaks to my converted LT. HECTOR MACLAINE AS PRISONER figure, sent him off to be painted by a talented & generous friend of mine, and got him back, looking IMHO fan-freakin'-tastic!

(3) Ordered and received some more of my upscale model RR "Grand Central Gems" fruit trees, which I now must base so they can help fill in another ORCHARD area on the table.

(4) Ordered and received a box of 10 more modest but still quite nice Apple Trees with plastic trunks & branches, which I am going to try to use to make one or maybe two all new orchards from scratch.  The first step, even before basing them, will be to hit their trunks and branches with a light grey and/or light brown dry-brush.  Depending on how the multiple other tasks on my To-Do List go, I may not get to this in time for the big game, but I'm still glad to have the trees on hand.

(4) Ordered, received and spray-primed some really nice looking SUPPLIES from Bad Squiddo and Acheson Creations, which I now need to paint at least some of, so they can help represent Ayub Khan and the Afghan Army's MAIN CAMP, together with the tents already in place.

(5) With help from my son, Skylar, actually managed to play-test the first couple of turns of the game!  This is definitely a high point on this list.  It's still very early -- we've only got through 2 turns -- but I think it's going good and bodes well for the future of the scenario.

(6) Got more WIP pics from my friend Bob Ridenhour, showing his awesome work on the Ahmed Khan Shrine.

Without further ado, here's some visual evidence for some of the above...

MARZA KOTAL:






























LT. HECTOR MACLAINE, RHA:









LAST BUT FAR FROM LEAST -- BOB'S IMPRESSIVE PROGRESS ON THE AHMED KHAN SHRINE:




THE REAL THING:



Tuesday, May 19, 2020

AYUB'S TENT (Kandahar Game Prep Post #4)

WAR ARTIST'S SKETCH - LOOKING WEST FROM ATOP BABA WALI KOTAL:


CLOSE-UP OF "AYOUB'S TENT":


MAKING AYUB'S TENT:

I asked a master modeler for advice on how to make this tent and he suggested I make the shape out of styrofoam and cover it with material from WOMEN'S NYLON KNEE SOCKS (similar to pantyhose but slightly different), using a 50/50 mix of white glue and water for it to stick in place over the foam.

This was the first time I ever tried this method, and as you will see below, I made a LOT OF MISTAKES throughout...

PHASE #1 - cut styrofoam shape(s)...
(glued together with HOT GLUE GUN)





PHASE #2 - I realized I should have cut the entire tent -- roof & wall sections -- as a series of ANGLES, so the finished model would look more like sheets of cloth stretched between tent poles.  Since I didn't want to toss out the foam shapes I'd already cut to size, I decided to cut pieces of CARDBOARD to fit and TACKY GLUE them to the foam, to give the model a more angled, geometric shape.  The TENT consisted of 13 roughly matching 7/8" wide pie slices.  I left a 1/8" to serve as an overhang from the roof, to fold down over the top edge of the wall..












PHASE #3: (This is one of several SCREW-UP phases, which anyone using this as a tutorial should make an effort to AVOID!) I realized I'd screwed up the basic shape of the tent by not making it wider at the bottom with walls tapering slightly in towards the roof.  Sigh.  So I cut some small lengths of STYROFOAM at an angle and TACKY GLUED them all around the bottom of the tent wall, to give it that angled up and in shape...




When it dried I was happy with the adjusted, slightly tapered, shape of the tent wall...


PHASE #4: The special ingredient - women's knee-high nylon socks and a set of nylon pantyhose; measure and cut pieces to fit over the roof and around the wall...




Before putting Phase #4 into action, I decided to excavate the solid interior of the tent...

BEFORE:

PHASE #5: I dug a good section of it out with a combination of and XACTO blade and a non-serrated KITCHEN KNIFE...

AFTER:

Then I cut out the DOOR, making it the same width as one slice of the "roof pie"...


I wrapped the pantyhose sock around the tent wall and cut a piece to fit...


Then, before moving on into unknown territory, I took some pics, as the white cardboard actually made for a decent "finish" on the WIP tent...



I used a few spots of SUPER-GLUE to fasten one end of the nylon in place, then wrapped it around the outer wall and used a few more spots of Super-Glue to fasten the other end...



On another piece of nylon I traced a circle to cover the roof, leaving room all around for it to hang over the edge of the tent wall...



Held in place temporarily with rubber band to get proper measurement...




I prepared a 50/50 mix of WHITE GLUE and WATER...






PHASE #6: I strengthened the structure of the model by covering the inner wall of the tent with WOOD FILLER...


Then I realized the exterior wall was smooth all around, when it should have been a series of angles, because of how the cloth of the tent's wall draped over the poles, same as on the roof.  What to do? 

PHASE #7: I found a spare remnant of very small hobby basswood strut left over from some old project, which thankfully was JUST LONG ENOUGH for me to cut enough "poles" for the tent wall to match up with the roof sections...






But it wasn't an ancient tent with poles visible outside, so I covered the pole-studded wall with a SECOND PIECE OF NYLON...


...then applied more 50-50 White Glue & Water mix...





Looking pretty good:


PHASE #8: I realized I probably needed to make a BASE for the model tent, to help keep it intact for the long haul.  First I made one from a sheet of hobby plastic, which was easy to cut out with sharp scissors.   But the more I thought about it the more I decided I'd rather make the base from wood than plastic, so I traced the plastic one, which I already knew fit the bottom of the tent well, and used Xacto and Utility knives...




Tacky Glue (because it dries extra fast)...






I knew I wanted to cut some small pieces of nylon and use them to make a pair of CURTAIN DOORS, which would be pulled back on both sides of the tent door...


After I cut them I glued them in place and brushed on the same 50-50 white glue/water mix...


I added some tiny tie-backs...



...and enjoyed the view...







Then it was time to move onto PHASE #9: PAINTING.

I started by BASE-COATING the entire tent with BROWN FABRIC SPRAY PAINT...



Then I brushed on DELTA CERAMCOAT MUDSTONE...


As seen in these pics, I left the recesses darker/shaded...



Next: DELTA CERAMCOAT LIGHT IVORY...






I painted the door curtains RED...


 



When all is said and done I'm not really satisfied with the final result, as the "finish" of the tent cloth is not as smooth as should be.  It's more textured and rough, which could be cool for different uses, but for a "modern"-ish tent made of canvas or cotton or silk, seems kind of wrong to me.

It could be the nylon sock material always dries like this, or more likely I screwed it up by adding the cardboard backing, which I'm sure had some impact on how it dried to the styrofoam.  Or maybe my mistake was in the painting style I used, which was dry-brushing.  Maybe I should have given it a more solid soaked-in all-over base paint job of white, and then built up some darker areas of shadow or outlined tent-poles.

At some point I hope to make another version of the same tent, or maybe do some smaller test pieces first and then a second go at the big tent.

I can't help but think if I'd used offcuts from paper towel, or thin cotton cloth from an old shirt, it would have ended up with smoother looking surfaces.

BUT I think it's still a nice model, and looks much more like the real Ayub's Tent than any of the various 28mm wargames tents available for sale.

So I'll sum up my review by quoting what a friend of mine once said about the Burt Reynolds movie "Malone": 

Better than "Stick," but no "Sharky's Machine."


PS.  I hope to soon receive a black Afghan standard patterned on the one in the war artist sketch, to fly atop the model tent.  It will be mounted on a 4" metal pole and I plan to stab down through the tent's roof, into and through a styrofoam pillar below.  When and if that happens I'll definitely add some more pics.