Showing posts with label skeletons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skeletons. Show all posts

9/11/21

Grimy Green Ghostly Skeleton Revenants

 


Kevin Dallimore wrote this fine article on a variant of painting undead Revanants for Oathmark, and I wanted to try it out on my Triumph of Death skeletons. 


The basic gist is to paint up the minis quickly (but cleanly) using shades of grey, and a mix of gold and silver for the metals. Then liberally apply washes of Army painter greentone quick shade. 


I kept laying on glazes, but then found my self wiping parts off. I then just went for it and I think after a total of 4 glazes called it good. 

This shot is a great side by side of how I normally paint my skellies. All in all I really like the technique and it does go quite quickly. I'll end up doing a full unit of them, maybe a few. 


2/9/20

Making Plastic Pikes


Warlord plastic pikeman marvels at the new pikes



Now don’t get me wrong, I love a good metal pike, and have used them quite a bit- I also have the scars to show it. More times than I care to remember I’ve impaled myself on my pike blocks. Looking for a good, and much more economical alternative, I found others making and using styrene plastic for pikes.  Here’s my step by step on how to make your own.

The bare bones version showing plastic pike

 

Tools



The most important tool that you will need, and might not have in your tool kit is a pair of smooth pliers.  Smoothing meaning no teeth in the inside grippy part.  Aside from that you will also need:
Cutting blade- A basic Exacto works, but for this job a chisel shaped blade is very helpful

Measuring device- to measure out your styrene pike lengths; once you’ve cut one, you can use it for a jig. If they are off a bit, I’m sure that’s more “historically accurate” than them being all regimental.

Metal Pin- use this to align hands 

Drill- in case a hole needs to be enbiggened

Rat Tail file- cleaning up any hands if needed

Glue- Super glue, gel type is the best

Note: Sharp things are sharp, pokey things are pokey and gluey things are gluey- all can give a good dueling scar- so please be safe and responsible when using them.


Parts


For this exercise we are making pike for my Triumph of Death pike miniatures. These minis come with polystyrene plastic sprues.  


Pike Making

Take your polystyrene rods and measure them out in sections to cut for your pikes. I measure mine at 60mm, which is roughly a 15 foot pike.  Cut the rods into your pike shafts. At 60mm you will get 5 pikes with a bit of excess. We’ll use the extra for practicing making pike heads.
I've cut it twice and it's still too short! 





Making spear points

This is actually quite easy, but does need a bit of practice. Take your flat nose pliers and “pinch” about 3mm of the end of a sprue to make the flat part of the point. Note that if you want a wide head squeeze more. Pike heads in general are not very wide, so I don’t squish the plastic too much. Really it’s up to you- but do try and practice on the off cuts first.
don't move the blade, rotate the sprue. 


Next take your favorite cutting tool and cut the flat shape to a point. First cut one side, then roll the styrene to the other side and cut it. If it’s a bit uneven, just trim a side to match up.


Once you have all your pikes made, time to put them in the hands of your troops.  With my Triumph of Death Skeletons the hands are made big enough to accommodate the styrene, and even a bit bigger, but sometimes in the mold and casting the hands get out of alignment to each other. I use a large sewing needle to put through the hands and straighten them up before I glue the pike in. You can also use this pin to move and pose the hands into a slightly different position to add variety to your unit, by slowly prying the hands about. This technique may mean you have to cut the back hand away from the body first.  If you find any flash, a rat tail file of a blade will make short work of it.  
Next, add the pike into place where you want it to go, then slide it up a bit, add glue to the hands and slide it back in. I use my Exacto knife to hold the pike in place while the glue is setting.



Ready for Muster
That’s all there really is to it.  When you have them all done, use a good primer and you are ready for painting.




Say- won’t the paint peel or break off it the pike it bent?

I’ve been making these for about 5 years now, and have yet to see any of my pike peel.  If you use a good primer and paint, and seal afterwards it should not be an issue.  If it does, simply re add some paint and re-varnish!

Here are some examples of the Pike skeletons with plastic pikes. Note that these guys have thicker (2mm) styrene rods for pikes to help visualize better.


Cheers, and thanks for following through. This technique also of course works great for spears, and banner poles.   If you have any questions, or have your own method in making these I'd love to hear from you.







10/24/19

Bats! A tutorial


Going Batty for Bats! 

So, a few years ago I was walking by a stationary store during October and saw this cool confetti in the window. Lightbulb! I had an idea.  Bat swarms!

Over the years I've made these for different games, friends and family, etc. Thought it was time to do a tutorial.  This tutorial goes over all the basics I've learned (some the hard way) and how I based this particular unit, for Kings of War.

Parts is Parts

The bat swarm is made up of three parts: bat confetti, insect mounting pins, and super glue gel.
Bats- found on Amazon, but check your local shops first

Bat Confetti:  These plastic bats are a great size for 28mm "Vampire" style bats. A bag of a bajillion of them costs from $1.99- $3.  Not only are they a good shape, the plastic bends well into animated poses.


Insect Mounting Pins

Caution- very sharp! 

Over the years I've used various methods to make "stands" for my bats, from larger straight pins to styrene rod. I think these insect pins are the best as they are the thinnest thing I could find, and are quite strong.  They come in different heights and sizes, but the size 2 pins which are 60mm tall I think do the trick.  Cost is about $7.00, but you get a 100 pins.  In my example I have about 23 bats on my base, so that's a total cost of $10.00-ish for  4-5 units worth of swarms!  Here's a link to the pins on Amazon


Super Gluin-it Right!

I'm all over the place with glues, but I've been liking the Gorilla Glues lately.  I do reccomend gel glues over regular so that the bats "stick" better.  Also I'm showing the pin vise I use to drill holes into the base.


Assembly 

This part is both easy and tricky.  Your first thought, as was mine, was dip the tip of the pin in glue, stick it to a bat, and done!  The trick here is the glue takes a bit of time to set, and the bats slide off and glue themselved to your table or fingers or pants (yeah, I found one) instead. Here's the trick I learned.

I use postit notes to put the glue on. Then roll the pin head to get a good "gob" of glue.


After putting glue onto the pin, stick the pin in something. I had a cardboard box close by, so used it.
Then, take a bat and balance it on the pin and let the glue do it's work.  Make sure to space them far enough apart as you are doing this so that you don't bump the other bats.  Let them dry for a good hour before mounting- which gives us time to do the base.

Bats on a stick!


All your Base!

 I'm basing this unit for Kings of War. In the forces of the Abyss army list you can have flying imps, so these could be statted like that. Honestly these could be considered fast cave of any type- it's really up to you! Back to basing. I started with one of my "troop" size Kings of War bases that I make, and trim the sides down with a box cutter blade, creating a bevel, which helps blend it into the terrain.
MDF KoW base

Always cut away from you!!!


I want some height variation to help the bat swarm look, swarmy... so added some cork to the base. they I spread glue on and added flocking sand. It was a hot day, so I put it outside for about 15 minutes and it was all dry.
Cork is cool stuff! (and easy to mount pins in) 

base covered in sand. I need to get more!
After it was dry, I gave it a base coat of Vallejo flat earth, and some dark grey(Foundry Stoneb 57b) on the cork to make them into rocks, and drybrushed with light earth and a bit of P3 menoth white base and grey  to lighten everything up a bit and grab details. Use whatever colors best work for you.


Add water to the mix. you have a lot to cover! 

Good enoufh as this will be flocked as well.

Once the paint was dry, I glued some flocking and some bushed on (but forgot to take a picture of that). I did this before mounting the bats so I would not get glue and grass accidently on the pins.

Pinning and mounting 

To make a good swarm, you will want to vary the heights of the bats. To do that you will need wire cutters to clip the pins. CAUTION  this is an important thing I've learned in doing this. Those tiny needle sharp off cuts will go flying and you will find them the hard way sometime later. I got one stuck really deeply in my foot. Here's the trick Tape! Befor cutting, place the pin on the sticky side of a piece of masking tape. When you clip it, the off cut stays on the tape.  I cut about half my bats pins, some really low, some mid ish. Play around and do what feels good.
Sticky side up! 

One piece of tape goes far- and is easily disposed of. 
Once cut, I started from the center of my base and worked my way out. drilling small holes and gluing the bats in. Before gluing, I bent the wings by gently pinching them with my fingers. Note that some of the bats, if not well glued, will pop off. I Made extras just in case, and re-glued the others on for future basing.  The cork works out great to give extra height to the overall look, and is easy to stick pins in.
nearly finished! 

Don't be afraid to play around- add more bats, bend wings, angle pins for movement
Top down. Note no bat goes past the base edge. 

Side view- this shows how I was trying to get them to swoop down.


Touching up! 

Once all together I play around with some of the wings, and see if I need to add more or less bats to create a flow. The plastic bats are very shiny plastic, but dull down perfectly once you seal the whole thing with a matte spray.  One thing I did do before I sealed the bats, was to go in with some dark brown and "gesture" the bodies, heads and wing frames. Nothing fancy and very "loose" painting, just enough to break up the shapes a bit. When I varnished the unit, the brown kinda got lost, so I'm going to go back and hit it again I think. I may also try a bit of grey.

Done! 

This entire project took about 2 hours, including waiting for paint to dry.  I'll be making more swarms, and using a few bats to dress up bases for my Triumph of Death undead.  I hope this was helpful, and I look forward to seeing your bat swarms.  Here's more pictures next to miniatures for scale.

Cheers!
Ths



10/6/19

Triumph of Death II: Pike Block


The Shamble of Pike

Heres an example of a pike block and command put together from my currently running Triumph of Death II Kickstarter. The Kickstarter ends on the 9th, so with 4 days left we still have 2 awesome Stretch Goals to unlock- that's like Free minis! Add that to the 8 Stretch Goal unlocks already on the pile!



 You can go check out the Triumph of Death Kickarter, here! 


10/3/19

Triumph of Death II: Greens


Greens! 


Drew has been sculpting like a mad man to catch up with all the stretch goals so we have them ready go to into a mold right after the Kickstarter.


Gun Crew- yes, maybe he's Dabbing

8 days left on the Kickstarter and we've already unlocked 8 Stretch Goals.  Swing on by and take a look!

Gun crew concepts 



Halberd attacking low- from concept to green 

9/27/19

Triumph of Death: Homage to Holbein


Hans Holbein's woodcuts have been an enormouse inspiration on my ast style and sensibilites for as long as I can remember. Its great to put together this homage in the things I love so much- toy soldiers! 

9/25/19

Triumph of Death II: Painted Command Set 1


Triumph of Death II is 10 days into the Kickstarter, and we've already unlocked 6 stretch Goals, with 2 more unlocks coming up fast!  Here's an example of Command Set 1, one of the many choices of packs for the Kickstarter.  Thought I'd try different backdrops and treatments to see what works best.





Unpainted version