Showing posts with label Dice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dice. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 March 2023

The Road to Warhammer Fest 2023 - part 4, building the Gnarlwood Encampment Mini display board


I mentioned in part 3 of this blog post series that I had become a little hyper-focused on prep for the Warhammer Fest Warcry Rumble, as it was the only gaming I could be sure will happen in the near future. I was hoping to sort out more gaming before then but I had nothing lined up. well, I'm happy to say I have recently booked a ticket for The Tangled Depths at Warhammer World on March 18th.

I've been to WHW a couple of times, and I've played in a few tournaments, but this will be my first my first competitive event at Warhammer World. It will also be my first Warcry tournament - it might already be evident that I'm not big on competitive play, and I will be playing with a narrative mindset and not worrying about my overall score.

Anyway. With less than four weeks to go to The Tangled Depths (and then only 7 weeks after that until Warhammer Fest) and still no display base, I felt like I had to just pick an option and get on with it!

So I settled on the picture frame and got going. I had already taken the glass and the card mount out of the frame, and replaced them with two layers of 5mm matt black foamboard. The foamboard filled the space perfectly but it left the models standing a bit low in the frame. So I cut another bit of foamboard, slightly smaller than the two in the frame, cut the edges into a slope, and rounded it off. My plan was for this to be the base to attach all the scenic elements, and just blutac it to the foamboard in the frame. This way the display base can also be used as regular scenery later.


To keep close to my idea to make it look like part of an orruk pirate encampment in the Gnarlwood, I fiddled-about with positions for some barrels, a chest, an old Citadel Woods tree, and my warband for a bit, until I found one that looked okay, and made good use of the space. The one thing it really needed now was some height.

I cut a smallish slice of pink foam for one corner as the core of a rocky outcrop. Once it was roughly the right shape (and intentionally smaller than the intended finished size, so there was room for the cork bark around it) I covered it with a layer of PVA to seal and protect the foam from the spray undercoat that would come later.

I attached a load of small chips of cork bark around the outside edges and a slightly larger lump to the back-right corner. Once the glue was dry I filled the gaps between the cork with basing texture-paste.

I tore-up some 2mm-thick cork sheet and glued it down onto the flat surfaces leaving small gaps between them - this creates a good broken-ground texture while leaving the spaces for models nice and level. It also ties it nicely to my Warcry board and a lot of my scenery as I've used the same technique on them.


(The barrels and treasure chest are from the Ossiarch Bone-tithe Nexus scenery.)


I added a couple of "mooring posts" made from dowels lashed together with PVA-soaked string. One was secured by gluing it to the base and the side of the cork bark rocky outcrop. The other by cutting a hole in the cork sheet, pushing into the pink foam with a sharp pencil then pushing the dowel into the hole, with a big blob of PVA on the bottom of it.


I cut a small triangle of canvas to size (after roughly measuring the space for it and marking out the triangle corners with a pencil) and painted PVA onto one side. Before the glue dried I folded two edges back and shaped the sail to look like it was hanging, suspended from the corners.




The following day I painted the other side of the sail awning with glue too. I had weighted the base down overnight with some small glass jars with a stack of notebooks on top, to try to minimise the warping that had already started to show a little. I later painted the underside of the base with PVA to try and counter the warping a bit more. It was mostly successful.

Once it that was all completely dry I sewed the sailcloth awning onto the rigging at the front and the smaller mooring post at the back - I painted PVA onto the sewing too, so it won't come untied and would take paint well.

Then I glued the gaps around the cork sheet and sanded them. I also added a few more plastic bits at this point; skulls, bottles, planks, smaller barrels and chests, and a flintlock revolving pistol.





Ready for undercoat!

As I mentioned, the scenic part is not attached to the frame, so it was easy to spray undercoat it without needing to mask anything. As usual, I gave it a black undercoat all over and a grey "almost zenithal" spray from about 45° all round. This was selectively boosted a bit in some areas with a second spray at a lower angle (mainly on the underside of the sail).


The paint job was relatively simple as I wanted it to match the rest of my scenery, so it won't stand out on the table when it isn't being used as a display base. I'm very happy with how it looks though, so much so that I might make some more piratey "Gnarlwood Encampment" scatter terrain to expand this bit! Maybe a camp fire and some more sailcloth awnings.





My warband just about all fit in! They do make it look a little crowded, but I think I get away with it.







One of my favourite details is the barrel with a skeleton sitting inside it (from the Bone-tithe Nexus kit). It's hard to get a photo of it though.

I like to think it was a stow-away who was unluckily trapped when the barrel they were hiding in was placed at the bottom of a big stack of other barrels, on a long voyage. The orruk pirates were probably disappointed when they opened the stolen cargo - they were likely hoping for strong drink in there!

Monday, 6 February 2023

The Road to Warhammer Fest 2023 - part 3, planning the Gnarlwood Encampment mini display board

I have become a little hyper-focused on prep for the Warhammer Fest Warcry Rumble, as it is the only gaming I can be sure will happen between now and then! I'm hoping to sort out more gaming before then but at the moment I have nothing lined up.

In the mean-time I am still building, converting and painting models, and working on the "off board" accessories to take with me. With about two months to go, my to-do list is looking fairly healthy:

The next thing on my list is the warband display board. The main options I am considering are:
  • A piece of "mostly open ground" scenery, on a roughly A4 sized base, that could serve double-duty as a mini display board
  • A 160mm round base with one or two small bits of scenery attached and open space for my warband (7 models on 40mm bases and 1 on a 32mm base)
  • The Cleavermaw sky-ship
  • The shipwreck Rogue Idol
  • A small wooden picture frame with a scenic insert instead of the glass.
~ ~ ~

The A4 scenery idea isn't really appealing as transporting it might be tricky, and it might just look like I brought some random bit of terrain and just plonked my models on it.


The 160mm round base idea isn't perfect as there is only just enough room for the whole warband of Ironjawz and a couple of scenery elements. Doesn't really sell the idea of an encampment. I still really like the look of a 160mm base warband display though, so I might make one anyway...


The Cleavermaw has been WIP for a long time - just over 3 years now - so using Warhammer Fest as motivation to actually finish it was pretty enticing. But neither the ship or the idol have space for my whole warband. They were not designed to display a warband to be fair, realistically both only have proper room for 3 or 4 models at most. The rest look a bit like they are about to fall off and some of them might get damaged as I add/remove them due to sticking-out bits.


It's a shame, as the Rogue Idol is already finished that would have been a really easy option - I would have loved to show it off too!


I hadn't really thought about using a small wooden picture frame because I had seen Matt (storm_of_chogoris on Instagram) made such a good one and I knew I couldn't hope to compete with that. But then my wife was about to get rid of one that was the perfect size and the perfect colour and suddenly it seems like it might be the best option!

~ ~ ~

I think the problem I'm having is that I really want the display base to look like a pirate orruk Gnarlwood Encampment.

In my head that means it needs to include the remains of a wooden skyship wreck (a bit of deck, the "fractured ribs" of one side of a ship's hull with some planking still attached, some rigging, and a bit of broken mast), red-and-off-white striped canvas sailcloth awnings strung up with rigging ropes between the shipwreck timbers and/or the nearby trees, lots and lots of piratey detritus scattered all over (barrels, sea-chests, coiled and knotted ropes, empty bottles, sacks, floats/buoys, anchors, bill-hooks, muskets, pistols, cutlasses, hats, nets, hammocks, maps, lanterns, etc.).

This is all probably a bit too much for one small display board to include!!

Monday, 19 December 2022

The Road to Warhammer Fest 2023 - part 2, Themed Warcry Dashboard


Another item on the list checked off!

I spent a few days trying to plan a Warcry Dashboard. My original idea had been to buy one and decorate it, but the few I've seen that were available commercially (in MDF or Perspex) always seem to be laid-out wrong to my eyes.

The White Dwarf dashboard was okay, but I wanted one extra space each for Doubles, Triples and Quads. I know they won't get used often but it would have annoyed me if I hadn't included them and they turned up in a game!


After several iterations I had I boiled my thoughts down to something I was happy with, so I put a fresh blade in my scalpel and spent 40 minutes measuring and cutting foamboard.


Then another 10 minutes painting text for the labels (that was a bit pointless, as they will be covered by later steps!).

I was satisfied with the layout so I glued the two layers of foamboard together. Then played with some dice...


Each space is a multiple of 17mm, so that a 16mm dice will pop in and out easily without sliding around or being held too tight.

Next stage; giving it some character!


A day or two later I marked out where the spaces would go on some heavy paper (that I had already stained with tea and dried). I wrote in the labels then drew a map around the text.


I carefully cut each space out (one at a time so I didn't mix them up!) and glue-stick'd each one inside the right slot before cutting the next.


Then I realised the broken up map was a bit "noisy", so I painted Agrax Earthshade onto the islands to make them stand out better.

+++

I really enjoyed making this, even if it was a little out of my comfort zone. I rarely measure/cut anything this accurately!

Tuesday, 6 December 2022

The Road to Warhammer Fest 2023 - part 1, Warcry Gaming Accessories Box

I have been using an old pine jewellery box to transport my Warcry gaming accessories for a few months now - it came with me to Warhammer World in August for the Animosity UK Meet-up for example. It's small enough to be easy to carry but still big enough to hold a bag of dice, Battleplan cards, a folding ruler, combat gauges, a pen, and a set of Warcry tokens.

Last month I got day-pass for Warhammer Fest 2023 and an add-on ticket for the Sunday Warcry Rumble tournament.

As my warband is already painted my thoughts have turned to the other things I will be taking with me: I'm planning on making a mini display board for them (maybe using an A4 cork pin-board, maybe using a GW 160mm round base - not sure yet). So by the time I go to Warhammer Fest I want to have these ready to take with me:
With this in mind I started thinking about this box. The plain aged-pine finish was okay but I thought it could easily be a lot more characterful and thematic.

So first I darkened the wood with a water-based "oak" wood stain and then, when that was dry, started drawing pirate orruk designs over it, with a 1mm waterproof pigment ink pen.

I did a lot of google image searches first for ideas, but I had a vague idea of how I wanted the finished box to look when I started; something mixing nautical scrimshaw designs, hand-drawn maps, recognisably nautical and/or pirate style symbols and calligraphy (skull and crossbones, a compass rose, anchors, crossed swords, curled/spiralled lines, etc.), and conventional Warhammer orruk/orc/ork symbols and glyphs (orruk skulls, weapons, checks, dags and flames). I also thought a few Dreadfleet map styled illustrations of monstrous fish thrown in wouldn't hurt.




The above is the front of the box - I think it and the top are my favourite faces.


I am pleased with the orruk glyph of the ur-whale I drew for Animosity II (or "Squidmuncha") on the back though. (I still thinks it's absolutely wild that someone liked my orruky fish-drawing so much they had a real tattoo of it done on their arm!!)


This is got a bit abstract! It's kind-of channelling weather maps and there might be a version of Azyrite script in there.

Maybe its a orruk shaman-navigator's way of mapping Realmgate travel?


This is my least favourite side. I messed it up a bit (where the anchor overlaps the crossed bones) and never really managed to get it to come together. I wish I'd done more maps instead of the skeleton, anchor and tentacles. I don't hate it though.


As I mentioned - I'm very happy with the top - I think I found a nice blend of orruky and piratey symbols. The overlapping circles are a motif I have used since WFB Storm of Magic as a way of drawing "magical diagrams".


Inside...


The bag came with some handmade soap my wife bought. I called dibs on it as soon as I saw it! (then drew a orruk skull on it with a marker pen).

It just about holds about thirty 16mm dice, but with just the 18 dice needed for Warcry it is very roomy, but doesn't feel too big.


These are the 3 sets of 6 dice I currently plan to use for the Warhammer Fest Warcry Rumble tournament (although they were all from dice sets sold for Kill Team).
  • The orange skull and crossbones dice (Phobos Strike Team dice!) are my Initiative Dice.
  • The slightly smaller black and orange ones (14mm Kill Team "Organised Play" dice from the last edition) are my Wild Dice.
  • The Ork set with the horned-skull are my Battle Dice.


Update: I have since replaced the 14mm Kill Team "Organised Play" dice with 16mm green WH40K Ork dice to use as Wild Dice. They should be a bit easier for my opponent to distinguish from the others!


The small card boxes inside each have a simple orruky skull and crossbones drawn/painted on top - the black box on the left was from a watch and the one on the right was from a craft shop.


Inside the card boxes are the Battleplan Cards and tokens from Heart of Ghur. In the gap behind them are 2 metal combat gauges, a wooden 2-foot folding ruler and a nice pen.

I don't know why exactly, but having "off the board" accessories that fit the theme of the warband / army really makes me happy. This obviously started with themed dice (and I have a LOT of dice...) but it has extended to almost everything else that I take to a game now!