Zavod 311 – Post 1: New Project Planning and Ideas

I’m a regular over on the DakkaDakka forums, and since I’m often too tired to actually paint or do anything useful after work, I like to spend time in the Painting & Modelling Blog section to shoot the shit, share ideas, give encouragement and occasionally be inspired. It’s like the blogosphere, but more moderated and a bit more conversational. Not better, but a different aspect on the discussion and hobby of toy soldats – and one I equally enjoy to blogging. (And easier!)

One particular friend, Grimdork picked up a toy tank from Hobby Lobby for 6 bucks. It’s a 1:48 Revell snap-together kit that apparently usually retails for $10-12 bucks in the US. Grim made an offhand remark about using it for WarPath and then later rusting it up and using it for scenery. Later he made a comment of maybe making a tank scrapyard out of it and a few more. Unfortunately for me, this started a chain reaction that’s going to take months to settle…

GrimDork’s stupid tank.

I thought it sounded like a spiffy idea, and proceeded off to Google image search looking for “tank graveyard”. The main two sets of images that came up were of an actual Tank Graveyard in Ukraine that some clever 18-year old broke into and took a ton of photos of, and the Battlefield 4 map – Zavod 311. Well, I started looking, and while I did, I got more and more inspired. The fact that I’ve been a battlefield series fan since the Beta of 1942, and that I’m one of those weirdos that sees a kind of beauty in rusting and rotting armoured vehicles probably helped. Not to mention that Zavod 311 is probably my favourite map in the game.

http://imgur.com/gallery/JDIGm
http://shiftedplay.com/threads/battlefield-4-real-life-zavod-311.1805/
http://ftr.wot-news.com/2014/03/05/tank-graveyard-in-ukraine/
https://goo.gl/maps/YUIEI

Tank Graveyard. Kharkov, Ukraine.

So then it was decided. I was going to do it myself. Or at least look into it. After all, it would make for a brilliant battlefield for 40k, not to mention moderns or Bolt Action. You see, I’m one of those weirdos that doesn’t think that all of the architecture in 40k needs to look the same. Even allowing for STC, etc, the Imperium should have a HUGE range of architectural styles of everything, since it’s a “recovered” empire that spans a huge chunk of space and so forth. Not everything needs to be skull-encrusted eagle-mounted flying buttresses with skulls on the skulls and looking like John Blanche’s drunken napkin scrawls made solid.

Zavod 311 Aerial View – Showing the rough area to be converted to a Wargames Table.

To me at least – flat, unadorned austere, decaying Soviet-style architecture and fortifications are just as apt for the Imperium. To me, brutal and overblown Nazi architecture and well-engineered buildings covered in eagles and flags are just as apt for the Imperium (though actually very conservative compared to the actual aesthetic). Likewise, Ancient Greek and Roman-style buildings – from villas to the Parthenon and the Colosseum are just as apt for the Imperium.

And of course, then we get to Gothic architecture that actually looks like Gothic architecture – surely that’s as apt for the Imperium as anything else – but including more than just spires, arches and flying buttresses. (look up some pics!) And then, why not include Romanesque architecture, and descriptions of places like Ultramar always make me thing of an ultra-modern 20th century city – skyscrapers of glass and steel, – thinking Singapore or Hong Kong or Dubai.  – And that’s all before we start talking about how Space Wolves live in space-viking space-longhouses and so forth.

So Zavod 311 and it’s real-life counterpart fit my 40k aesthetic sense perfectly.

Zavod 311 Map View – Showing the rough area to be converted to a Wargames Table.

I looked online for awhile to see about these six-dollar tanks, but to no avail. Not available at all here in Australia, apparently. I could eBay them, but they’d cost a fortune. And I wanted twenty tanks, dammit! I then realised that I’ve bought 1:48 scale tanks to use for 40k before from Korean sellers, and that I should check those out. At this point I traded in the idea of M60 Shermans for the T-72, which just fits the theme so much better –  and while they all sell them for the same price, give or take a dollar or two, NewLangleyShop also had the magic “make offer” button next to it’s T-72s. I was able to sort out a batch order of 20 T-72s and 4 Merkavas (for hull variety, I’ll probably take the turrets off) in 1:48 scale for a very decent amount. Since they’re all going to be junked, I wanted to go as cheap as possible. I also lucked onto a bloke in Melbourne who happened to be selling off some 1:48 armour kits for $10 each, so I grabbed all 6 he had for sale.

Academy 1:48 T-72

Academy 1:48 Merkava

So, with it all happening, I gave Andrew’s Hobbies a call, and explained my vision for a wargaming board, and asked a few questions about materials he has and can get in, as well as train scales that could work for our odd little mix of 1:56/1:48. I’ve always liked the idea and look of having some rails, a few flatbeds, rolling stock and freight locomotives on a wargaming table – Andrew happily spent 20 minutes on the phone to me (pretty much a stranger) giving encouragement and advice about materials and train scales. Apparently “O” scale is approximately 1:48. And it’s also hard to get hold of (especially here in Aust) and trains cost approximately eleventy bejillion dollars. (which I kinda knew, but wow… worse than I expected!) While I’ve bought the odd bits and pieces of modelling supplies off Andrew in the past, I’m not one of his mates and I doubt he’d even recognise me, and so I was very impressed at his being willing to give me that much time and advice. I’ll certainly be down there to pick up a lot of the parts I need.

I’m recognising from before even starting that this is going to take months. Much of the work will have to take place over the Christmas holidays when I can get stuck in during good weather, long hours of daylight and no work-weekend cycle to keep winding my energy and enthusiasm to paint and model down. In the meantime, it’s something else to work on between trying to finish the various army projects that I want to get finished – KoW Ogres, KoW Elves and Dark Elves, KoW Gondor, 40k Dark Angels, 40k Iron Warriors, 40k Imperial Guard, 40k Tyranids and 40k RT-themed Crimson Fists (amongst others) – no tot mention boardgame figures and random cool-looking models.

I’m also going in expecting that I should take my best time estimations for every bit of the project and quadruple it at best. I’m also not one of those guys who is a scratch-building genius, or even especially decent at stuff like that, so it may end up looking as rough as all hell. Let’s see how it goes…

 

 

 

 

 

Inconsequential Things

As I get older, I come to the realisation about many things in my life. I’ll probably never get around to watching all the TV shows I’d like to. Likewise with movies. I don’t know if I’ll ever get around to playing all of the board and miniature games I’ve bought – and I know I’ll never finish all of the PC, 360 and PS3 games I’ve bought. I also realise that I’ll probably never get around to painting all of the models I own – yet, as with all of these things – I continue to collect and accumulate more and more of them – on a weekly basis.

So what does this mean for painting? Well, there are two main roads I can go down. Either I can try to paint better, and spend all my time trying to learn new techniques, increase my skills, and improve all elements of my game. My friend Cash Wiley is one such painter, who has come along incredibly in terms of skill in the last two or so years. However, Cash only finishes a relative few figures per year – albeit to a high standard that is increasing all of the time. My (failed) target last year was 365, and I’m on my second attempt for 365 this year. The other path is that of simply getting shit finished and onto the table. Because you know what? “Good enough” is actually good enough from four feet away when each individual in a block of 10 or 20 or 40 really isn’t all that important and doesn’t need to be anywhere near your best work. I’ve been reading the Bolt Action and Hail Caesar rulebooks over the past few evenings, and almost all of the sumptuous models in those books, in the evocative and atmospheric photos simply don’t pass muster as display models. Yet, ranked up or walking through hedgerows in the close-up photos in those books, they still manage to look fucking amazing.

So what for me? I won a few painting comps in my youth – my best and most amusing being equal first with myself (they couldn’t choose which of my two figures they liked the best) at CanCon back in 1992. I should photograph and post those guys sometime, too. But with father time and my own inevitable demise starting to make themselves felt, I’ve decided that every model can’t be my best model. As readers would have seen with the recent speedpaints of Zombies and, erm, more Zombies, and the Treeman and the Bolt Throwers, I’ve been going for speed lately. I think really though, my path as a painter needs to go down the middle. I need to finish stuff. Now more than ever really, especially with my games table now being a thing that exists. I also need to take time out from mass production and speed-blasting through stuff from time to time to work on individual figures with details and freehand, for the soul of it all.

This post, aside from reading a bit like a teenage girl’s diary or a man in midlife crisis (neither of which is totally accurate :p), is mostly a chance to show off a bunch of stuff I’ve gotten done this year. Nothing amazing or outstanding. Inconsequential things really. Much of it is scenery, and in the scheme of it all, none of it is really important. But it’s a bunch of stuff that got done, and in that, it’s good enough. The plan is to photograph everything that I finish this year, and eventually to photograph everything that’s painted in my collection. That last part might take some time.

Mid-90’s GW Dryads.

These guys are some Dryads that I was either given or sold quite cheap by a friend back in the mid-90s. I’m not sure why I wanted them, so they must have been cheap or free. I think they may actually be recasts, given how malformed some of them are. Anyway, I found them in the bottom of a box of figures recently, and since I was able to finish the Bones Ent/Spirit of the Forest in a day recently, I thought I’d try and knock these up quickly as well in a similar manner. While they’re no works of art up close, they’ll look fine from across the table in KoW or in a game of Pathfinder, etc. A good example of “good enough”!

DUST Quonset Huts

Dust Quonset Huts

The Quonset huts I previewed a few posts ago when I cracked open some of the DUST Tactice expansion boxes. These painted up pretty quickly. I went with a worn desert scheme since my main mat is a desert mat. It also seems to be the most appropriate colour for moderns, and of course works just fine for WWII and 40k. I need to buy another couple of packs of these – they’re pretty great as well as inexpensive.

DUST Quonset Hut with Space Marine for scale.

Dark Angel Marine charges out of the Quonset Hut doorway.

I also took a couple of pics featuring a GW Space Marine, since they’re so ubiquitous that they’re very useful for establishing scale for this sort of thing. I’m sure the Dark Angels have some fights around these huts in their future!

Aged statues.

Here we have four statues made from random miniatures, some short resin columns that were no doubt in a bargain bin, and some plaques made from card. These were all originally made about 8-10 or so years ago. The writing is all painted freehand, and comes from an English-Greek dictionary, and an English-Russian dictionary. Naturally, I can’t recall what they actually say so many years later. This year’s work on them has been to “dirty them up” as they were way too clean – hence the dirt and wear on the stone, and the verdigris on the statues – which was my first play with the new Citadel Technical Paint “Nihilakh Oxide”. Verdict: It’s okay.

Resin wooden barrels.

Resin wooden barrels. Chronopia figures for scale.

These barrels were started years and years ago. When? Who can remember. The important thing is that they’re finished now. I had a bit of fun (back when I started them) freehanding the cans on the two smaller sets. I’ve included the second pic with the Chronopia figures for scale – the barrels are a good size for both roleplaying as well as various types of wargaming. Sadly, I found several more of them in a box this evening. So.. more to come, more to go. After a bit of Internet Detective work, (and using my memory) I found the barrels, which are still available, over at Scotia Grendel Miniatures.

Battle for Macragge Power Pylons

Power Pylon things from the 4th Edition 40k starter set: Battle for Macragge. I just added the tufts to these this year, and that’s too little for me to count them as part of this year’s tally (they were only finished last year). They were sitting next to a bunch of the other stuff I grabbed to photograph tonight, so they got a pic taken as well, since they fit the theme of this post, and as stated, I want to eventually photograph and post everything.

Trapdoors and Grates.

More random resin stuff from my dark past. Dungeon scenery stuff this time, along with two trapdoors from the GW Lord of the Rings Mines of Moria boxed set. The usual drybrushing and so forth, of course, but with the addition of oil-based MIG rust washes added. An example of wanting to knock stuff over but also using simple, inconsequential  things as an opportunity to play with new materials and techniques. – Like the statues above and Nihilakh Oxide. And I’ve just found them. The Grills pack from Grendel – though my pack  back in the day only came with three, not the six they now come with. The last piece of that set is on my “stuff that’s been started and put aside” shelf right now.

Resin Graves

More resin gravestones.

Once again, more resin randomness from my past. At one point, back when I started these in the noughties – I planned to base them on and make a single large scenery piece of a graveyard that I could plonk down on a table. At some point back then after startting the large base I changed my mind and decided to leave these as standalone pieces, which I think was and remains a better idea. Much more flexible this way, and I can still make an actual graveyard piece if I want to use the various tombstones that have been part of various GW (and others’) skeleton kits over the years. While these are more fantasy themed, but these could also work well for WWII or Zombiepocalypse gaming quite easily. And yep, it turns out that the graveyard set is also a Grendel Set. I suspect that a huge percentage of my resin scenery will turn out to be these kits. I bought a hell of a lot of them back in the day.

Secret Weapon Scrap Yard Barricade Truck.

Secret Weapon Scrap Yard Barricade Truck.

Secret Weapon Scrap Yard Barricade Truck.

Secret Weapon Scrap Yard Barricade Truck.

One of the real highlights of my Secret Weapon Miniatures Bag(s) ‘o’ Crap that I picked up in December – along with the Hesco and Jersey barriers shown previously was this overturned Half-track Ute (or truck) from the Secret Weapon Miniatures Scrap Yard Barricades set. I had quite a lot of fun painting this, with layers of washes and drybrushing and mediums and edging and applying effects with foam and so forth. Obviously this thing works best for Sci-Fi/40k/GorkaMorka/Post-apocalyptic stuff, but if you squint, it could also work for moderns in Afghanistan or the like.

Secret Weapon Destroyed Tank Turret.

Secret Weapon Destroyed Tank Turret

Secret Weapon Destroyed Tank Turret.

Secret Weapon Destroyed Tank Turret.

Another nice surprise in my Bag(s) ‘o’ Crap was this turret. Part of the Secret Weapon Miniatures Scrap Yard Destroyed Tank set. A pretty nice piece, though Holy 3-d print lines, Batman! Still, for the price I paid for it, and even full RRP ($20 for a whole tank) it’s pretty nifty. It’s just occurred to me that I should have taken a scale shot with that Dark Angel next to the Truck and this Turret, but rest assured that both are well taller than The Emporer’s Finest, and I’ll take a couple of scale shots as an append to one of my next blog posts. Again, with a little squinting, this thing will work well in games set in any year from 1940-41,000.

And that, my friends, is that.

A not insubstantial update, but as I noted at the start, made of many of the sort of things that hardly justify an update in their own right. I’m up to 81 miniatures finished so far this year on Day 60. I’m ahead of schedule, though only because my criteria is so loose. Still, shit’s getting done. Which can only be a good thing. I hope to soon finish a few of the things blocking me from a couple of “fun” figures that I’m really looking forward to.