Another project I’m working on is this little Japanese diorama. It’s all pretty simple. The outer wall is a cheap wooden picture frame that I cut a hole in for the entrance. Everything else is made of thin, non-corrugated cardboard. I looked up some pictures of real Japanese buildings and of scale models and then designed my own building in Adobe Illustrator. I then printed out the design and used it as a template to cut out my cardboard. I've made the building and the courtyard as two separate parts, so they are easier to paint. The building still needs a roof and I have a bit more detailing to do before it gets to that, though. There will also be a couple of duelling samurai.
Time for some more simple 40k scenery: craters and rubble piles. Both are pretty easy projects and pretty quick too, if unlike me you plan out your work a little so you don’t need to continuously correct your mistakes along the way! For the craters, I started with two old writeable dvd’s. I first closed off the central holes with mdf miniature bases. I then broke off semi-triangular wedges of cork from a pan coaster and hotglued these to the dvds, forming circles (see the picture below). I then applied wall filler to the craters to hide the mdf circles covering the central holes and to add some texture to the cork. I then glued smaller bits of cork in between the larger wedges and added coffee grounds for texture. After this step I noticed that the cork wedges didn’t look very natural. Tapering them off made them look a lot better (picture below). I then gave everything a coat of black paint: I still thought the craters didn’t look quite right, though. They were a bit too uniform ...
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