Scenary not complete and buildings (pics):-)

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MADRE
Posts: 10
Joined: Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:41 pm
Location: VALLADOLID (SPAIN)
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Scenary not complete and buildings (pics):-)

Post by MADRE »

based of the design of rick.

http://www.redrick.net/
very nice diorama: two umps.

Design with Corel Draw 13

builds: fine cardboard. and plastic items.
plate Scenary: styrene 3cm 600mmx300mm.
Sand: River Beach Sand, paint and brushing.

the evergreen plasticard is very fat for my and hard to cut
I do not have as much patience like rick :lol:

I use the plasticard only for bases.

that it seems to you ¿? a little insipid no ¿?

the bridges and another plate need for scenary completeed !!!

I have been inspired by afganistan landscapes an pics.

more ahead it will buy houses proper :lol:



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La guerra es la mejor escuela del cirujano.
The war is the best School Medic.

Mk 1
E5
Posts: 2383
Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 3:21 am
Location: Silicon Valley, CA

Post by Mk 1 »

Bueno, Madre!

Very nicely done.

I think you have done very well making a scratch-built town. The buildings look very good, even if they are just card-stock. Windows and doors help in the look.

You may want to paint them up too, to help complete the picture. I have found that enamel paints works best for card-stock. When I have used acrylics (water-based), they have soaked in to the card more than the enamels do.

Two cheers for your use of improvised objects for the mosque. Do I see a squeeze-bottle top and a 35mm film canister? :) Again, a bit of paint may help complete the impression. With the skill you have shown on the ground terrain, I am sure your painting of the buildings will be first-rate.

I also like to find odd objects to use for my micro-armor buildings. Here is an example:

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The buildings in the village are commercially bought. But the factory in the distance is part of a keyboard cover that came with a new computer. Cut, with some smoke-stacks added, and then a bit of paint. Works out great on the wargaming table.


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Another view of the factory. Now you can also see a bridge in the background, made from cut carboard.

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A close-up of the bridge. One of the trucks in the background has been hit and burns, using the colored yarn technique Thunder mentioned in another thread.

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The MIGs were built from carboard and plastic putty about 25 years ago. :oops: Not exactly the best example of scratch-building, but it is the buildings I really wanted to show. The hanger complex is the plastic cover of some parts for my car that I bought at the auto-parts store. The houses are made from balsa-wood.

Have fun. Show us more pictures as you do more with the terrain! :P
-Mark 1
Difficile est, saturam non scribere.
"It is hard NOT to write satire." - Decimus Iunius Juvenalis, 1st Century AD

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