Larry
Your battlefield display is amazing ... can you tell us about your hand built pieces, like the materials used for the bridge ?
Looking forward to the Redcoats ... Which happen to be my favorites and which got me into this TS hobby in the first place. {sm4}
Bests
OD
Some really some great shots and I love the scenery,especially the bridge.where did you get it and where did you get the Frenchmen?
Mark
There are 10 -12 pieces that I have built so far, but I have a list of over 50 things that I am working on.
** The wood pile and terrain piece is a few hours of cutting small sticks to length and using tiny amounts of glue to hold together.
** The table that you see in some of the shots is small sticks that were whittled and sanded down flat and then multiple coats of stain to get the right look and texture.
** The log barricades were larger branches that were sized and then flattened a bit on the top of one and the bottom of the other to fit together.
** The small wooden bridge / or fence is the same as above.
** I have made about 10 -15 boxes so far, mostly out of Starbucks coffee stirrers. Cut to any size that seems right. I am working on those now but I put in two just to see how they would look. Still need to be weathered at bit.
** Some of the barrels were purchased from Michaels (a craft store) but most are dowels that are carved out and routed to shape then painted.
** The bridge was the first Major Building project and required some research. I want everything to be accurate to 1776 so I built the bridge from documentation I discovered about construction in the era.
First I built the terrain river by layering many applications of small/ filtered gravel and applying a coating of FUTURE floor wax. Glue the gravel, tint, floor wax, glue more gravel, more tints and then more FUTURE until I like what I saw. The actual bridge was made for branches that were notched and fitted together. Then the actual bridge planking is bass wood that is sized and stained then weathered.
** The backdrop is one that my wife tossed together and she is working on a few different settings
There are other items if you look careful and a lot more to come.
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Mark, the Frenchmen were one of the earliest releases of King and Country AWI sets. As you will see K&C (in those days) used the same pose for five different Regiments so you will see the same figure but painted according to the Regiment or Army. I guess Andy want to get a lot of mileage out of a particular sculpt way back when, however I love them.
Larry