Now we need to add smaller rubble. I scatter patches of rubble,            paying particular attention to the edge of roadways and rivers  and around            the "boulders" I placed earlier. I also cover up parts of            the putty where the knife strokes seem too obvious. You can  add patches            in open ground as well (see the photos below) but remember  that you            also want to leave room to place loose terrain pieces. Your  models will            look fine teetering on a pile of rock, but although your  cottage model            will be in no danger of falling over, it won't look as good if  one corner            of it's base is off the ground.
The            material I use for this size texture is coarse ground coffee. I  started            using this years ago when someone at work was about to throw  out a huge            tin of Maxwell House that co-workers thought was too strong. I  rescued            it, thinking to use the tin for the basis to build a tower. I  was about            to embark on my first set of terrain boards at the time and  realized            the texture of the ground coffee would be perfect for  mid-sized rubble!            That was ten years ago... and I still have some of it left. I  have since            found that choosing a flavor of coffee that matches the period  you intend            to game in adds another level of realism to your boards...
Ok,            I made that last part up, but you were already thinking about  what            kind of coffee would go with your Belgian countryside terrain weren't  you...
Anyway,            I put down a small patch of glue, smear it around with a damp  brush,            and sprinkle on the coffee grounds.
At            this point, the rubble areas will look heavier than they will  end up.            After letting the glue dry overnight, I vacuum the boards to  remove            any stray grounds before moving on to the next step. Remember  the advice            I gave you about the iron a few posts back? This goes  doublely for            the vacuum. Best not to even risk this when your significant  other is            home...
 




 
Great tutorials - thank you for posting them for everyone.
ReplyDeleteI would have thought ground coffee would be too fragile to use like this - I am obviously mistaken.
Sheesh... hoovering up coffee grounds - what could be more innocent? Still, she's let you have two rooms AND an occasional use of the iron - consider yourself blessed!
ReplyDeleteI take it if coffee grounds constitute an unacceptable risk some other rough scree or model railway 'ballast' will suffice? Do you sand off the top edges of the water course at all or just palate knife it when laying down the filler for the riverbed?
Cheers,
Doc
Doc, the pics in this post are of a road... sorry I didn't make that clear (time to edit the post). The MDF board is left exposed and smooth for the water. I only put the filler on the banks.
ReplyDeleteOh, and yes any gravel, ballast, mid-sized rubble will work for this stage. We're going to add a finer layer of texture in the next step to cover the filler and tie all of the different terrain types together.
ReplyDeleteWith obviously failing eyesight I squinted at the picture (readily viewable to the normal sighted) and lo! I saw it was a road! Doh!
ReplyDeleteSorry 'bout that - I'll look forward to your river ones then...
Cheers,
Doc
PS: To make it up to you - pop over to my blog and help yourself to some artwork!
I'll be sure to make one of the river boards the star of the next part (coming up tomorrow or Monday hopefully)...
ReplyDeleteClarence, do you use only 25/28mm miniatures on your boards? My problem is I want to use your terrain system but I game with both 15mm and 25mm. Should I just make up the differance? I'm worried roads will look to large for 15mm and to small of 25mm. Thoughts?
ReplyDeleteLarry
These days I normally only play 28mm. It won't hurt if your 28mm units are slightly wider than your roads in march column. Try a few different sizes of roads with scraps of paper to figure out what looks right.
ReplyDeleteYes your right, I'm just over thinking this and being anal!!
ReplyDelete