Fantasy Flight – Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes – Beorn (Beorning and Bear-Form) and Calaminth Took

Fantasy Flight - Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes - Beorn (Beorning and Bear-Form) and Calaminth Took

Today we have another pair of heroes from FFG’s Journeys in Middle Earth board game. Since the last few posts of models from this game have been from the Forces of Shadow, I felt it was time to do another couple of player characters.

Fantasy Flight - Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes - Beorn (Beorning and Bear-Form)

So first up we have the Chieftain of the Beornings himself, Beorn – in both his human and bear forms.

Beorn was one of those models that was hard to get started on, but then once I sat down and concentrated on working on him after the initial skin and fur coats, really almost painted himself in what turned out to be a pleasant morning and early afternoon where I got both forms completed.

Fantasy Flight - Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes - Beorn (Beorning and Bear-Form)

There’s not a lot else to say here really, Naturalistic colours for both models, some pleasant blending, and they were done pretty simply and easily.

Fantasy Flight - Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes - Calaminth Took

The second character for today is another one of the many (created) Heroes from Journeys in Middle-Earth board game in the form of Calaminth Took, presumably a relative of Pippin. I guess she provides the game with the same role for hobbits that Tauriel provides for the Hobbit films since there – as I mentioned when I posted my painted Elena and Beravor there aren’t a whole lot of canon female characters in Tolkien’s writings, and even fewer when it comes to adventurer-protagonist-type characters. Calaminth was cleaned and primed as I’d initially hoped to get her painted for Fembuary this year, but it didn’t end up happening at the time, so as a model that seemed relatively straightforward to get painted, I’ve gotten her done now, bit by bit over a few days.

Of course, this same expansion includes artwork for a female Rohirrim with African features and an Asian Elf, but I’ll have more to say regarding my thoughts on those models once I have them painted.

Fantasy Flight - Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth Spreading War Heroes - Calaminth Took

As far as painting Calaminth, there’s really not a lot to go on, so I took inspiration from the character card (as seen above). A bit of a cross between sterotypical Ye Olde Matronly English Inkeeper and “Hobbit”. (Complete with a somehow-immaculate apron even in the midst of adventuring in the wilds!) Another model that was a bit hard to get started on but went pretty smoothly and quickly once I did start work. And that’s that! Now I need to decide whether to paint another pair of heroes, or do some more villains. I’ve got plenty of both all ready and prepped for painting…

15mm Terrain: Flames of War/’Nam Battlefield in a Box – Island Huts/Vietnamese Huts – Weathered & Repainted (BB169, BB196)

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

So in a move that should surprise exactly none of you who are regular readers of this blog – I repainted the two sets of these huts that I reviewed the other day. So this is what I did….

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

With the first set, I repainted them almost entirely – repainting the exterior walls and then painting the interior walls in the same colours. I kept one lighter and one darker, more or less keeping them in broadly similar tones to how they were originally.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

The second set I kept in their original colours as a base before adding the weathering, and found a close enough match of the outside walls to paint the interior walls before weathing those as well in a different manner.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

All four buildings then had different combinations of thinned Army Painter Strong Tone, Soft Tone and Mid Brown added – with the white building getting thinned Vallejo Light Gray Wash instead.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

I also repainted all of the doors and window coverings on all four sets so that both sides would match. Finally, three of the four were drybrushed with Vallejo Bonewhite while the other with Vallejo Silvergrey.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

The roofs were all given thinned-down washes, again using combinations of thinned Army Painter Dark Tone, Strong Tone, Soft Tone and Mid Brown – and with some drybrushing of Vallejo Stonewall Grey and Silvergrey. They looked okay, but there was something still not quite right about them. I then went back over them, stippling in combinations of Dark and Strong Tone to give them an uneven, weathered look that just reads much more naturally. You can see how much of a difference adding that made in the pic above – stippled, unstippled, stippled, unstippled.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

Finally, I darkened the lower walls by drybrushing with a mix of Vallejo Panzer Grey and Dark Rust  – and then everything was sprayed with Matte varnish, and then it was just a matter of waiting until dry to take these photos! Then when I got to the point of taking the photos, I was really unhappy with the lighting, so ended up putting this post off for a couple more days so I could get hold of some new lights for when I need to photograph models in larger settings on the gaming table rather than just in the light box.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

As noted in the previous post on these, I have no intention of using these in games set in the Pacific or ‘Nam/Asia, and instead these will be used in my Flames of War games (and eventually, Team Yankee/World War III moderns) as European Thatched Roof buildings, because amazingly, simple thatched roof buildings are something found pretty much worldwide.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Island Huts (Gale Force Nine BB196), Vietnamese Huts (BB169), 1/100, 1:100 Wargaming Terrain, What a Tanker, Team Yankee WWIII, Battlegroup

While the doors and windows on these models appear to be made of something resembling bamboo if you look up and reeeeal close, there’s also no reason that these couldn’t simply be simple thatched shutters and door coverings in a European building – or possibly even North African buildings in some locales. For European games, I think they’ll work well as either rustic rural homes or as aditional buildings on a farm-type property as the photos in this post show – much easier to visualise when they’re on a nice mat with something else like roads nearby, even without trees, hills and all the rest…