Above is a pic of Lt. Colonel James Galbraith, Regimental Colour in hand, alongside Bobbie the regimental dog and some of the other "Last Eleven" survivors of the 66th (Berkshire) Regiment, making their last stand in one of the walled gardens just South of Khig village, a few miles West of the Afghan town of Maiwand.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Constructing the recent rocky hill...

The family and I are almost done with our European vacation, and tonight one of my daughters was a bit under the weather, so we all came back to the hotel somewhat early -- at least for Rome -- and everyone is sleeping, except for me, so... rather than walking the streets of Rome alone and potentially getting into various kinds of trouble, I am going to post a big batch of pics I filed away before we left, showing the construction of the hill I recently posted a tutorial on painting.

The materials are all the usual suspects:

-Masonite/MDF baseboard (usually 3/8" or 1/2", but for this smaller hill, just 1/4").
-1" thick high-quality insulation foam for the base contour.
-rubber cement to glue the base contour down to the baseboard.
-lots and lots of WOODCHIPS.
-Hot glue gun and lots and lots of GLUE STICKS to very quickly and efficiently glue the woodchips to the styrofoam, and to each other.
-various pieces of styrofoam cut to size and shape to form the interior of the second contour, inside the ring of woodchips.  As you can see from the pictures, this process is much more an "art" than a "science" (though obviously it doesn't qualify as either, hopefully you get my meaning!).

The "fabrication" of these hills is rather labor-intensive, and somewhat time-consuming, but in addition to IMHO looking good, the end product is both light and highly resilient, able to withstand the rigors of gaming while retaining its looks.  So for me at least, its worth the time.

The hill pictured here is my 4th one done in this exact same style -- got one large, one medium, and this second small one.  I have the baseboard and base foam contour cut out for a fifth, extra-large, one, which I hope to get around to completing in time for the 133rd anniversary of the Battle of Charasiab, this coming October 6th.  I hope to get a game of the battle going using these hills as the high ground South of Kabul, which General Roberts had to fight his way through.

One last note on building this hill: you will see a couple of different black spraypaints used for the prime/base-coat.  This is because I hate using anything but water-based paint on exposed or even semi-exposed foam, since in my experience this always leads to foam being eaten away.  Still, spraypaint is so much faster and more efficient as a primer coat for these hills, I am constantly on the lookout for water-based black spraypaints.  Most of my experiments in this regard have failed to one degree or another.  The paint shown here failed as well, simply because it turned out to have a satin finish, which was just too close to glossy for me to live with.  But I took my chances, figuring that having been sealed with a couple of coats of the acrylic black paint, I could risk going over it with a light coat of standard matte black enamel spraypaint.  Luckily for me, this worked without leaving any visible damage at all.  I have since bought an air-brush, and hope it -- alogng with some flat black acrylic paint -- will prove to be the final solution to this ongoing dilemma of how to start the painting process for these hills without damaging the hill itself!






















































































In case anyone reading this HAS NOT seen the previous post on finishing up the paint job for this hill (which is the FAST and FUN part of the building process!), please click on this handy LINK to get there...

Sunday, August 19, 2012

More of Maiwand in 1/6th scale...

I just took a water-taxi from the Venice train station, through the canals, to the 15th Century hotel where my family and I are staying -- but the thing I'm really excited about is an email that greeted me via the hotel's wifi system, from the incredibly-talented TONY BARTON, containing a link to pics of the updated versions of his custom-built Maiwand figures.  Here's the LINK -- and here's one tasty sample pic:


That's all for now from the heart of beautiful Venice, where even an entire city of Medieval and Renaissance treasures can't keep a good Maiwander down!

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Another rocky hill...

About to head off on a family vacation and wanted to put this up before leaving.  Just finished this latest rocky wood-chip hill this past week, and think it turned out well.  Nothing new compared to the prior info I've posted on building and painting these, but still feel it's worth posting.  Right now I'm just posting painting pics, the construction pics will have to wait, there are too many of them, and not enough time right now.  Still, some good stuff here I believe...

Here's a pic of the finished product, just before receiving its first coat of paint...

It's made of 1/8" Masonite baseboard, 1" white insulation foam for the base contour, glued down using rubber cement, wood-chips and more styrofoam all joined together with a trusty hot glue-gun, then Elmer's Wood Filler used to seal exposed foam surfaces and add texture, then mixed ballast and pebbles glued onto some of the surface areas, to blend in better with the ground cover on my terrain boards, and everything -- except the wood-chips -- gets a coating of Woodland Scenics "Scenic Cement" applied with an eye-dropper, to help bond it all together...


Spraypaint base coat of BLACK...


Heavy dry-brush -- just shy of a second base coat -- of DARK BROWN...


Medium dry-brush coat of HONEYCOMB (Delta Ceramcoat shade of caramel) ONLY ON THE BASE CONTOUR AND TOP OF THE HILL (not on the ROCKS!)...


Lighter dry-brush of Delta Ceramcoat SANDSTONE (the Dark Brown, Honeycomb, and Sandstone trio are the same colors used on my terrain boards, so now this hill should blend in pretty well with my ground cover)...



The trickiest part: mixing some HONEYCOMB (the caramel colour) with a little BLACK to create the deep, drab "olive-brown" shade I use on the rocky crags...






Light highlight dry-brush of MUDSTONE (Delta Ceramcoat colour) on rocky cliffs only...




Even lighter highlight dry-brush of SANDSTONE (Delta Ceramcoat colour) on rocky cliffs only...




Tribesmen take up firing positions near the base of the hill...


An old Wargames Foundry Darkest Africa British Officer -- sculpted by the oh-so-talented Mark Copplestone -- crowns the heights for purposes of observation...


Fortified by The Guides...



Close-up of a piece of rocky hillside...


Gotta' save the "construction" pics for another day, but one thing I'll add is that these hills -- despite looking somewhat heavy -- are actually quite light, while also being very sturdy and able to withstand a decent amount of use/player abuse, while retaining their appearance.