The clear out continues. I've put my 20mm Afghan theatre modern British and my British Army of the Rhine on ebay this week. I'd love to think they are all going to a good home. If anybody's interested they can be found at Modern British 1980's BOAR Thank you for looking
When I lose my mojo for crafting (it happens) I tend to find myself watching some of the guys on Youtube. One of the people I particularly like at the moment it Nat1 videos . At the end of last year he posted a video where he made a rather spectacular, ruined Weathertop. I got inspired so I bought a couple of sheets of 20mm XPS foam, drew out a rough plan and got shaping. Starting to take shape. A couple of Mithril miniatures for scale. After getting the pieces how I wanted, I gave the whole thing a coating of watered down PVA, mixed with black acrylic ink. The whole thing was then painted grey, coated in a wash (made from acrylic ink, ilford rinse aid, acrylic medium and water). After the wash was dried, I got to dry brushing. Three layers in all, grey, grey mixed with cream, and a light highlight with cadmium white. It's mounted on a cork floor tile, painted up, with a scattering of foam flock. Overall I'm more than happy with the result. Strider and the Hobbits, taking it fo...
Like a lot of you I've been playing and hobbying Joseph McCullough's Rangers of Shadow Deep lately. For the few of you who are unfamiliar with RoSD, I can't recommend these rules enough, especially during the current lockdown (though it's much more fun if there's a group of you playing). They have rekindled my interest in the hobby which was waning of late. There's not a huge amount of miniatures required to start a game (though the number soon builds up if you intend on playing the various campaign missions), the space needed is generally quite light (a 3ft square will usually suffice) and the terrain can be as complex or as simple as you like. Your humble narrator checks the rules, while our adventurers arrive at the Infected Forest. The rules are simple enough not to get in the way, but complex enough to feel involved. They sit happily between board game style fun and RPG style immersion. And once you're all set-up it's no great stretch to ...
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