👉🏻 Watch Next - Painting Realistic Wood - ruclips.net/video/TI3rHMujdug/видео.html QUESTION OF THE DAY: What are your Scenery Painting Tips & Tricks? -------- Products of Note used in the Video: 𝗕𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗹𝗲 𝗢𝗳 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗕𝘂𝗹𝗴𝗲 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗦𝗲𝘁 𝟯𝗿𝗱 𝗘𝗱 elementgames.co.uk/wargames-and-miniatures/historical-miniatures-games/bolt-action/battle-of-the-bulge-starter-set?d=10754 𝗥𝘂𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗱 𝗙𝗮𝗿𝗺𝗵𝗼𝘂𝘀𝗲 elementgames.co.uk/wargames-and-miniatures/historical-miniatures-games/bolt-action/scenery/ruined-farmhouse-reformatted?d=10754 -------- 🛍 Check out my Amazon Storefront to see all my favourite Hobby Goodies in one place that I like to use and recommend. (UK) - www.amazon.co.uk/shop/swordsandbrushes OR (USA) - www.amazon.com/shop/swordsandbrushes PAINTS USED: Colour Forge: Trench Brown Spray Johnstones - Mocha Wilko - Biscuit Crunch Wilko - Seashell Winsor & Newton - Burnt Umber Wilko - Pure Grey Daler Rowney - Yellow Ochre Daler Rowney - Burnt Umber Johnstones - Antique Cream
Very well done. Lots of attention to detail. This tutorial covers a range of skills for creating, because there we're lots of parts which were clearly table top ready, but you added more intricate stuff of people wanted to go further. Awesome job
Thank you very much! :) I tried to cram in a fair amount to this one, as i'll be doing a lot more scenery on the channel as well as scratch building so this was a nice one to kick off with :):)
Looks great! My tips for scenery is get a half full bottle of PVA glue and fill it with water. Once the glue is dry with a layer of sand or grass, use a brush to put this mix on to harden it more and get in the all the area. Color in some similar pieces of terrain with a bit of color to mark it and give it some backstory. One house might have a door that's a bit more red while another likes a slate grey. This way you can have the terrain with a little bit of visual difference & narrative history. Also with similar pieces of terrain try to give it some variety with arrangements or additional decorative bits to make them different.
Great video, and some cool ideas to give variety to the scenery! I'd love to see your take on some Dwarven Forge terrain, they've got some great scatter pieces that are pretty good for RPGs and wargaming alike, and I think you could do some really cool work with it.
The Hamlet kit I got some years ago had all the parts in bags and they were all bent and twisted. The houses were very difficult to put together because of that. I managed to squeeze an extra ruin out of it by adding a scratchbuilt wall segment, but I was left with the impression that it was more work to try and make the mangled parts work than building it entirely from scratch. Nice to see Warlord apparently ships them on the sprue now.
oh no! At least you managed to get some extra ruins from it - silver lining and all that! :) I suppose over the years companies progress and refine how they do things, I remember picking up my Smaug dragon from GW at the time over a £300 model and it was just in plastic bags in a box! I thought at the very least some sponge could have been used on the delicate parts. I still need to repair some spines and get that painted :)
Aye it's a good kit to be honest! I think having a couple of these could give you more than enough for a larger building and some extra low lying ruins too :)
ah yes! Some of us Brits on a Sunday morning when the sun actually comes our way flock to a field somewhere in the countryside to sell and buy random junk. And if it's a good car boot sale, then there is a donut stand for a little treat haha
Experiment and try everything, if it doesn't work then repaint. Always wright things down, colours used, flock used and washes used. Guarenteed six weeks down the line and you've forgotten everything. Been there and still doing it...............
👉🏻 Watch Next - Painting Realistic Wood - ruclips.net/video/TI3rHMujdug/видео.html
QUESTION OF THE DAY:
What are your Scenery Painting Tips & Tricks?
--------
Products of Note used in the Video:
𝗕𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗹𝗲 𝗢𝗳 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗕𝘂𝗹𝗴𝗲 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗦𝗲𝘁 𝟯𝗿𝗱 𝗘𝗱
elementgames.co.uk/wargames-and-miniatures/historical-miniatures-games/bolt-action/battle-of-the-bulge-starter-set?d=10754
𝗥𝘂𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗱 𝗙𝗮𝗿𝗺𝗵𝗼𝘂𝘀𝗲
elementgames.co.uk/wargames-and-miniatures/historical-miniatures-games/bolt-action/scenery/ruined-farmhouse-reformatted?d=10754
--------
🛍 Check out my Amazon Storefront to see all my favourite Hobby Goodies in one place that I like to use and recommend.
(UK) - www.amazon.co.uk/shop/swordsandbrushes
OR
(USA) - www.amazon.com/shop/swordsandbrushes
PAINTS USED:
Colour Forge: Trench Brown Spray
Johnstones - Mocha
Wilko - Biscuit Crunch
Wilko - Seashell
Winsor & Newton - Burnt Umber
Wilko - Pure Grey
Daler Rowney - Yellow Ochre
Daler Rowney - Burnt Umber
Johnstones - Antique Cream
Very well done. Lots of attention to detail. This tutorial covers a range of skills for creating, because there we're lots of parts which were clearly table top ready, but you added more intricate stuff of people wanted to go further. Awesome job
Thank you very much! :)
I tried to cram in a fair amount to this one, as i'll be doing a lot more scenery on the channel as well as scratch building so this was a nice one to kick off with :):)
Looks great! My tips for scenery is get a half full bottle of PVA glue and fill it with water. Once the glue is dry with a layer of sand or grass, use a brush to put this mix on to harden it more and get in the all the area.
Color in some similar pieces of terrain with a bit of color to mark it and give it some backstory. One house might have a door that's a bit more red while another likes a slate grey. This way you can have the terrain with a little bit of visual difference & narrative history. Also with similar pieces of terrain try to give it some variety with arrangements or additional decorative bits to make them different.
Great video, and some cool ideas to give variety to the scenery! I'd love to see your take on some Dwarven Forge terrain, they've got some great scatter pieces that are pretty good for RPGs and wargaming alike, and I think you could do some really cool work with it.
The Hamlet kit I got some years ago had all the parts in bags and they were all bent and twisted. The houses were very difficult to put together because of that. I managed to squeeze an extra ruin out of it by adding a scratchbuilt wall segment, but I was left with the impression that it was more work to try and make the mangled parts work than building it entirely from scratch. Nice to see Warlord apparently ships them on the sprue now.
oh no! At least you managed to get some extra ruins from it - silver lining and all that! :)
I suppose over the years companies progress and refine how they do things,
I remember picking up my Smaug dragon from GW at the time over a £300 model and it was just in plastic bags in a box! I thought at the very least some sponge could have been used on the delicate parts.
I still need to repair some spines and get that painted :)
I do hope they've fixed the scale. The original version of the set was clearly 1/72 inside a 1/56-48 gaming set...
But I doubt it!
Hello ! thx for this video !
Thank you kindly for watching :):)
The farmhouse looks like it's something that would work rather decently as a medieval or fantasy ruin as well...
Aye it's a good kit to be honest! I think having a couple of these could give you more than enough for a larger building and some extra low lying ruins too :)
What kit is this? Looks great.
It's Warlord Games ruined farmhouse
RIP WILKO tester pots
They are still there, just all online nowadays :)
You're NOT an octopus? You LIED to me?!
Alas no, but a mutation like that would be awesome - think of the amount of minis you could paint! :)
Car boot? Is that the trunk of a car?
In the UK it's a car boot sale, or over the pond a yard sale or swapmeet. Same as, just a different wording. Ah the hobby and what we do for it.
@@zippy5131 I had no idea. Thank you.
@@mikesvirtualhikeandtours1721 No worries buddy or is that pal? Got to love South Park.
ah yes! Some of us Brits on a Sunday morning when the sun actually comes our way flock to a field somewhere in the countryside to sell and buy random junk. And if it's a good car boot sale, then there is a donut stand for a little treat haha
Experiment and try everything, if it doesn't work then repaint. Always wright things down, colours used, flock used and washes used. Guarenteed six weeks down the line and you've forgotten everything. Been there and still doing it...............
Very good advice indeed! Especially scribing down paints and flocks used! :)