(Another of my son's efforts - real postings to resume shortly!)
Monday, 31 October 2022
Wednesday, 17 August 2022
A tribute to Bill Making Stuff
If you don't know the Bill Making Stuff channel, you're missing out - it's a terrific mix of whimsy and creativity. And it's brimming with great ideas for gaming projects: imagine Rick Priestley's deodorant hover tank as Studio Ghibli would have done it.
It's also by far my son's favourite YouTube channel. He recently made this short and cheeky tribute:
Monday, 8 August 2022
Stranger Things!
My son has been busy over the school holidays building various beasties from Stranger Things.
You can see how these fiends were made here:
Sunday, 17 July 2022
Marauders of the Wastes
Tuesday, 12 July 2022
Speed-painted Stargrave troopers
These are some grunts for our sci-fi skirmish games. For speed-painting, the holy grail is a miniature that can be very quickly painted up in one or two colours with a few details added to create the illusion that more care has been taken. These fit that bill. After undercoating them black, I drybrushed them in two shades of turquoise, then slopped some black contrast paint over the guns. All that was needed then was to pick out the visors and add some markings.
This technique depends on just ignoring differences in materials. So belts, armour, clothing and pouches all get treated the same, and hands are assumed to be gloved. But it's reasonably effective - and very quick.
They had a suitably ruthless first outing in a game of Mutants and Death Ray Guns, in which they managed to dispatch all of their mutant and robot foes without so much as a scratch.
Sunday, 26 June 2022
Things from The Thing
My son has made some of the things from The Thing. They'll be handy in sci-fi skirmish games, and the big one will also work as a chaos god in Hordes of the Things (appropriately enough ...).
Tuesday, 10 May 2022
Khonshu!
My son's take on the Egyptian god Khonshu, from Disney's Moon Knight. He's made from tin foil and Fimo and based as a god for Hordes of the Things.
Here's how he (my son, not the skull-faced deity) did it: