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Made in us
Dark Angels Neophyte Undergoing Surgeries






Hollywood, California

This last week I told my friend about my various plans and visions to create 6 foot by 4 foot static terrain sets for each of my armies. He asked me "why don't we start tonight?" I started to reply with a list of reasons as to why it couldn't be done just yet ... but ended up making "um" and "uh" noises, as I actually had no real good reasons why I couldn't. So we did.

A quick trip to Home Depot, and we came back with a plank of half inch thick MDF. We would have picked some plywood, but the planks had all bent. MDF was straight as a board, forgive the pun. In order to get it in my car, we had to have it sawed in half ... but the intent here is not to make a modular terrain set, it will be static.

The Vision: An Eldar Maiden world in Autumn. I chose a fall scheme to better represent the Eldar being a dying race. I envision this maiden world as a kind of futuristic park/nature preserve. It is not completely wild, as the world was probably terraformed for future Eldar population. It will have a man-made feel to it, yet still look like a natural, beautiful place.

Below, you can see our drawn out plans for the various hills on the MDF. The board is sitting in the table frame that I made a year ago to hold 6' x 4' terrain sets. It folds up like a briefcase into a 3'2" x 4'2" briefcase so it will fit in my car ... but it's so heavy that I'm not sure I'll be transporting it around any time soon.



The end of the board pictured above will be multi-level, with a river cascading down a series of waterfalls into a pool. A cobblestone path will come from the other half of the table, up a 2-step stairway in the shape of a yin-yang (Eldar flavor) and over a bridge in the pool before trailing off the side of the board.

Below, the other side of the board.




I originally planned on having the Warp Gate from my previous terrain set as a fixture in a courtyard that the path will lead to. I've since changed my mind, and left the courtyard alone. It looks fine without the Warp Gate, plus I've decided to have the Warp Gate as one of my custom Eldar objectives for the two missions using them. I'll post pics of the finished Custom Objectives when I get them all done. So far I have a Warpgate, a fallen Autarch, a crashed Falcon, and a Runed Stone/monolith. I'm short on ideas for a fifth.



Above, a view of the entire plan. It's hard to see, but there's another hill in the back left corner.

Now, on to the styrofoam. We cut these pieces with a hot-wire cutter, attempting to stick to our line drawings, and making small adjustments to make it work. These foam blocks were glued down with some PVA (Elmer's White Glue), and a trench was dug out with an X-Acto knife. I wanted the pool bottom to be choppy, so I cut and tore it out with the knife.



Below is a whole table shot. You can see the yin-yang stepway over in the center.



With our basic hills in place, we decided to take what trees we had and plan them out. The trees are from Woodland Scenics. These are the 3" - 5" trees. Woodland Scenics does miniature scenery for Model Train sets. Model train set stuff is an AWESOME resource for 40k miniatures, and you can get TONS of static grass, turf, fake snow in large containers for fairly cheap.



Below is a pic of my Farseer standing among the trees for a size reference. They work very nicely.



Ok, having planned the tree placement, we applied a layer of Papier-mâché (or simply Paper-mache to most of the USA) over the styrofoam. When hard, it forms a thin concrete-like layer, which will significantly reinforce our styrofoam hills.



Now for some basic brown interior wall paint. While it does dry fast, there were some areas where it was very thick, so we waited a few hours to make sure everything was dry and ready. The river and pond were also coated in brown with the intent of adding some greens and blues afterwards.

After the paint was down, we set about cutting out the various things that will be cobblestone with some plasticard. Plastruct makes plasticard with various indentations and patterns. The one used here was a round stone. You can see below the Yin-Yang stepway and courtyard were done. The courtyard is a bit smaller than we had originally drawn. This is because the plasticard sheets only came so wide. Also, the trees were glued down.




My Alaitoc Falcon Grav-tank mid-field for size reference:





Looking at our board, we decided that we were significantly short on the amount of trees we needed to make this look right. A quick trip to the hobby store, and we had over twice as many trees as originally planned. This is a good thing, as the board was lacking in serious cover. Also, the path was placed down, and I added circular parts to the courtyard to make it look better.







With a little glue, we pasted some rock along the short walls of the stepway, to make it look more man-made and crafted than the rest of the park. The hills were stepped, so they looked manmade as well, but the steps were a part that we felt needed that extra touch.



Ok, the next step was a HUGE one. I made a mix of three different shades of static grass (a yellow "hay" color, a bright green, and a burnt green) in order to get a color that went with the autumn theme. We added some dull green turf to that, and some bits of yellow, orange and red in order to look like some of the tree leaves have also blanketed the landscape. Using a large bucket of watered down glue, we painted the terrain in small sections, sprinkling the mixture on top. In a couple minutes, we would blow the excess off, collect it back into the bucket, and repeat with another patch of land. A few hours and some hard breathing later, and we had the following:



In small patches where the grass didn't stick too well, we glued down leftover pieces of the trees that had fallen off in the packaging. These "bushes" added another layer of life to the board. Also, a watered down mixture of Devlan Mud (GW wash) was applied to all the cobblestone plasticard after first coating the plasticard with diluted glue (so the wash would hold)





We had a package of a purple powdery substance billed as "wildflowers" for train-sets. Below, you can see a few patches that we applied this to, again to break up the "lawn" and make things look more natural.



The river and pond were heavily drybrushed with Dark Angels Green, then drybrushed with Hawk Turquoise, then lightly drybrushed with Ice Blue. We had some resin called "Waterworks" from Woodland Scenics that we had planned to pour in there. By exaggerating the pond's floor, I was hoping the resin would pick this up and give the pond a cool effect.



Ok, everything was done except for the water, and the bridge. Before we put that down, however, we emptied two cans of cheap hairspray (make sure yours doesn't say "glossy" or "shiny" anywhere on it) on the grass, trees, bushes and what-have-you. This will harden in about 20 minutes and make it so the grass, flowers and other natural effects do not rub off ... which means it will be perfect for miniatures.

For the bridge, I cut two thin pieces of styrofoam to go in the pond, and placed a strip of the cobblestone on the top. The whole thing was washed in Devlan Mud, and then we poured the resin. My wife had a delighted "giggle-fit" watching the resin pour down our river and waterfalls.



The white rapids you see are another Woodland Scenics product called Water Effects. It's a white paste that you can place and sculpt after the resin's dry or even while it's wet. It will harden. The idea is to make ripples and rapids.



Closeup of the pond with bridge:



And lastly, a picture of my Dark Reapers next to the pond. I had always planned on having the given army's terrain set match their bases, and here's the proof to that. They blend in. It's amazing and awesome.



All in all, the table construction took 3 days from blank board to waterfalls and pond. My friend has suggested that we use those cool Egyptian looking statues on the Dire Avengers Sprue (I have 4 of them) and put one in each of the four circle sections of cobblestone surrounding the courtyard/landingpad/thing. I'm considering it. It definitely wouldn't hurt, but I do like it just fine as is.

Tell me what you guys think.

Dark Angels
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Hive Fleet Harbinger
Black Legion
Evil Sunz
Bork'an
Daemons
http://masterdarksol.blogspot.com/ 
   
Made in us
Death-Dealing Devastator






Looks great. I might be stealing some of those ideas for a display board I am making soon.

If you think you are too small to have an impact, try sleeping with a mosquito. 
   
Made in gb
Junior Officer with Laspistol





Sheffield, England

That is totally awesome. Nice work!

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Made in us
Battleship Captain





Perth

Wow - the water effects look fantastic and I love the yin-yang feature. Fantastic!

Man, I wish there was a real Black Library where I could get a Black Library Card and take out Black Library Books without having to buy them. Of course, late fees would be your soul. But it would be worth it. - InquisitorMack 
   
Made in gb
Highlord with a Blackstone Fortress






Adrift within the vortex of my imagination.

I love it, but I question:

1. Will it fold in half like you say? Do the trees come out for storage etc.

2. Do you have space for a board per army you own? Four or so of these will take up a small room on their own while leaning against the wall.

n'oublie jamais - It appears I now have to highlight this again.

It is by tea alone I set my mind in motion. By the juice of the brew my thoughts aquire speed, my mind becomes strained, the strain becomes a warning. It is by tea alone I set my mind in motion. 
   
Made in ca
Morally-Flexible Malleus Hearing Whispers






Well I kind of moved near Toronto, actually.

great work!

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Made in ca
Devious Space Marine dedicated to Tzeentch






Creston, BC

Very well done! I can't wait for your very battle report, on this table.

Again, great job Darksul!

   
Made in us
Dark Angels Neophyte Undergoing Surgeries






Hollywood, California

Orlanth wrote:I love it, but I question:

1. Will it fold in half like you say? Do the trees come out for storage etc.

2. Do you have space for a board per army you own? Four or so of these will take up a small room on their own while leaning against the wall.


1. The trees/hills do not come out. they are static to the board. The set was built on two pieces of 3'x4' MDF board. These two pieces sit inside of a briefcase-like frame. When I mentioned that I could fold it, I meant only the empty table frame. The board halves that the terrain is actually fixed to would have to be removed first. The two halves of the terrain set would be stored seperately from the table frame.

2. I would need to build a few shelving units to hold the various table-halves. As it is currently, no I don't have the capability of holding more than say 3 whole terrain sets. When I get some large shelving units in, I'll be able to hold more in the garage you see in the pictures. The photos are actually kinda decieving as far as how large the garage is, there's more room in there than it looks like.

Thanks for the support and high praise guys. We're thinking our next set will be an abandoned, ruined Fortress Monastery in a swamp/jungle world for the Dark Angels. Marble tiled floors, sections cracked and broken off (as if massive earthquakes); also sunken sections as the swamp is swallowing pieces of the fortress.


Dark Angels
Alaitoc Eldar
Hive Fleet Harbinger
Black Legion
Evil Sunz
Bork'an
Daemons
http://masterdarksol.blogspot.com/ 
   
Made in us
Angry Chaos Agitator





Pensacola, Florida

Wow! Nice work!!!

Now I need to burn it in the name of Slaanesh, Nurgle, and my own desires!

Nice job though.

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Made in us
[DCM]
Illustrator






North Carolina

Very very nicely done guys. Reminds me so much of my own autumn table ^_^, only bigger!

Some thoughts for future boards/other table makers:

The hill sides (or whole board) could use some more realistic texturing to add even more visual depth to the table. The folds in the paper mache sort of break up the illusion some for me.

To add additional color variation to the woodland scenics trees, I used some krylon spraypaint and dusted the tops in appropriate colors to help break them up some. It really makes them look a lot nicer and less cartoony. You have to paint the trunks if you do this though. A quick bestial brown dusted with bleached bone is effective enough to get you by though. Did you guys give any thought to magnetizing the trees to facilitate gaming more?

From here you can add a few more elements in much the style you've already done your table. A few small hills could add just that much more tactical depth to an already great table. Some stone walls/wood fences/hedges work well too on this style of board. You also might consider adding some more clumped bushes along the edges of the hills as well.

If you haven't seen my table, definitely check it out. It's eerily similar to what you guys have accomplished here ^_^.

I love woodland scenics stuff through and through. I haven't come across a product that wasn't completely worth my time. I highly suggest folks get out there and try them. The results are great, especially for the price.

Great work once again guys.

-Aaron
Call For Fire

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Made in us
Dakka Veteran





Alexandria, VA

beautiful table.
   
Made in us
Lurking Gaunt





Awesome table, makes me want to try and make one myself!

Freaka
   
Made in gb
Towering Hierophant Bio-Titan





Bristol, England

Nice work. Simple, quick and effective. Thumbs up!! Can't wait to get a bit of space of my own and dedicate a few weeks to scenery. It really does make the difference.

Re: Your Dark Angels table........
http://uk.games-workshop.com/spacemarines/darkangels-monastery/1/
Something like this??? Hope it helps.

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Made in pl
Grovelin' Grot Rigger





Awesome man! Weel done!

 
   
Made in gb
Ultramarine Land Raider Pilot on Cruise Control






Yorkshire, UK

The board looks great - the only issue I would have is that for a game of 40k there doesn't seem nearly enough good cover.
From most places on the board it looks like you could get LOS to just about anywhere else. Is it just me? or do the pictures not do it justice?

Great work in any case - I'm really inspired to get back home so I can carry on working on my own board...

While you sleep, they'll be waiting...

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Made in gb
Longtime Dakkanaut






London UK

yeah,

Your Table looks great.

Do you have plans for some moveable terrain, the warp gate isn't fixed down.
like Grey death said/done on his own board small moveable elements make all the difference tactically impeading movement and providing cover...
Maybe some buildings? something for tanks to hide behind/ get a hull down.

I made some eldar buildings you can see here for ideas? my still only 90% done village! your modeling on the warp gate looks great so i'm sure your finnish will be better!

What's your plans?
Looks great I'd love to Play a game on it..
even better would be your table and grey deaths pushed together for some apoc!

PaniC...

   
Made in pl
Araqiel





Very nice report and great table. I like the colour you choose for the trees. Fit your table much better than standard green ones.
The only thing I could try my pickiness on is water. Personally I`d base it with different colour. Not that strong blue, but more muted blue-green or some really different colour. Also I`m not huge fan of "water effects". Usually way overpriced and doesn`t give as good effects as urethane or polyester resins (which are also cheaper). The only problem with standard resins is that you need to find a right one, that won`t yellow with time or do something strange with the paint.
That being said I really love your table. Keep great work up folks!

   
Made in us
Dark Angels Neophyte Undergoing Surgeries






Hollywood, California

@JoeyFox: You're welcome to come over and try, though my Eldar might have something to say about that.

@grey_death: I remember lurking around here when you were posting wip pics of your autumn table, and when I saw your trees and bushes I thought "holy crap, wth did he get those?" and that's when I found out about Woodland Scenics ... so a lot of what this table is, is due to your previous success. I saw the trees and thought about using those autumn colors myself, and thought that the best place I would want them would be on an Eldar Maiden World kind of terrain. I don't plan much trees for any of the other sets I'm going to do as they're going to be much more urban (though we have drawn out rough plans of a Tau outpost in snow terrrain with a few pine trees). Thanks for the advice on the hillsides, they are definitely the one part I feel is most lacking, as all we really did was a quick drybrush with a lighter brown to put some faux texture down. I've got a storage shelf large enough to accommodate the high terrain, so we didn't really find the magnetizing trees necessary. It is a great idea, though. I may just use the krylon spray on the tree tops. Thanks for the praise, it means a lot.

@Alex: Yeah, like that. But where they used some pieces as a centerpiece for a table, I want to make nearly the entire table ruins of a monastery. I imagine SM fortress monasteries to be monstrous things, and plan for nearly the entire board to be covered in pieces of the crumpled ruins ... but yes, I saw that piece that GW did and filed that away for future use.

@Chimera: While we have a good amount of area terrain here, you are correct in that there isn't much true solid cover. The only real solid cover present is how the hills on the half of the board have seemed to split the conflict into two separate areas; those up in the hills near the pond find a hard time drawing LOS to the area terrain bits down below, and vice versa. The open area in the center is pretty much open to anyone's LOS, though. We kinda had plans on making each board a bit different in what type and what amount of terrain is present. We would then roll for which board we used, so the Tau player didn't always get the open field here The future sets will have more solid cover, for sure.

@Panic: I don't want to make hills and such, because I'm less on the idea of modular terrain sets; I've tried one before and I hated it. It's much easier to make a static terrain set that looks like it belongs than a modular one with seams and such to break up the illusion. However, I had another plan to do similar. I don't like the idea of the green objective markers, so I want to use custom objectives. The Warp Gate is one of them. It's rather large, and due to it's being able to be placed anywhere it acts in a similar fashion to a moveable hill/wall. Another objective I made is a crashed Eldar Falcon. It's also a rather large objective that achieves similar. Not all the objectives are going to be as big, but I made some large ones so that we could add an element of changing the dynamic of the terrain to it. I love the buildings you made, and I wish I'd seen that thread before starting construction of the Maiden World, as I may have attempted adding some in. As it is, I wanted the Maiden World to be an empty world waiting for colonization, so buildings would take away from that.

@Przemas: This was my first time with the water effects. I used a strong blue, thinking that I needed to over-exaggerate the bottom to get the desired effect. You are right, though. If I were to do it over, it would definitely be more muted. There will be more water in the next table, as some sections of the Monastery will be sunken and the occasional puddle of water, but these will be all browns and greens. We'll see how the next one works out. Hopefully we only get better at this.

I'll post pics of the custom objectives when I finish them (I'm about half done). Can't say this enough, but thanks for all the high praise guys. Even the criticism is appreciated as it makes me seriously consider what I planned vs. what actually happened, and helps me take all these things into account for future projects.

Dark Angels
Alaitoc Eldar
Hive Fleet Harbinger
Black Legion
Evil Sunz
Bork'an
Daemons
http://masterdarksol.blogspot.com/ 
   
Made in pl
Araqiel





@Master Darksol: I found tips at HirstArts quite sueful when I`ve started experimenting with water effects:
http://www.hirstarts.com/tips17/tips17.html
http://www.hirstarts.com/tips15/tips15.html#pools

   
Made in fi
Giggling Nurgling





good table very good job!
   
Made in us
Fresh-Faced New User




Arthur Ashe Stadium

OMFG YOU ARE AN INSANE PRO!!! wow wow wow wow wo that is amazying

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