This diorama has been done for a couple of weeks but only now can I find the time to post it.
The whole thing is 2 feet by 2 feet in size but split into 4 1 foot square pieces so it can be displayed in various ways depending on the space available.My customer had given me a detailed layout so all I had to do was interpret his wishes.
One of the most important parts of the diorama is the cobble stoned road where most of the figures and vehicles will be displayed. I have found a good supplier of these sort of things- Miniart (http://miniart-models.com/) do a cobblestone set in plastic. It is good value and the detail is spot on.
I gave up making trees ages ago and so buy them from JG miniatures in Sheffield. This diorama has two of his birch trees and two tree line sections. They are great and fit in with my colours and style.
There is quite a bit of fencing on this layout so we decided to go for barbed wire fencing to keep it interesting. This was the first time I had done this wire fencing in this scale and will definitely use it again. I use textured steel wire. It is very shiny so I leave it in vinegar for a week and when it comes out it is beautifully weathered.
We also needed a road side shrine. I found a pretty little statue that I painted grey and built a small structure around it. I placed it just off the road in amongst the trees so should add a bit of interest.
The rest of it was built up using flock and scatter mainly from Woodland Scenics along with some water mix for the ditches either side of the road. That is about it.
The photos have 2 First Legion German infantry in them just to show scale and terrain always looks better with figures on it. Please ignore the fact they are from their Stalingrad range!
Just to finish off here are a load more photos of the diorama:
Thursday, 29 March 2012
Wednesday, 28 March 2012
London Toy Soldier Show- 31st March
I have been away from the blog for a while but I have a good excuse. I have been spending all hours possible this month getting ready for the London Toy Soldier show this weekend.
In past shows, we have been selling toy soldiers or getting rid of old stuff but this show is the first one of a new approach. I no longer have soldiers to sell so my stand is full of terrain. It takes alot of time to fill 12 feet of space with scratch built 1/30th scale terrain pieces. I just about got finished today and here are photos of the results:
I have all sorts there from WW2 ruins and sentry boxes to Roman watch towers and marching fort walls.
I wanted to do something set in Southern Europe as there are a few ranges around now that can use that sort of terrain. This is designed as a shelf display with it being only 6" deep. I used a photograph of a real building for inspiration with the front arches particularly catching my eye. The stone work is carved Daz Pronto air dried clay and the pan tiles are resin sheets that I have had made for me. I was going to use some other tiles but when I came to it I hadn't got enough.
This was inspired by a planned larger diorama for a customer that involves a sentry box. I really liked the idea and thought it would make an excellent stand alone piece. The arm works and most of it is made from balsa wood except the arm which is stronger pine dowelling. I really enjoyed painting the stripes.
This model was inspired by a discussion I had with a potential customer who wanted a Roman watch tower. I thought it would make a good piece to add to any Roman display so I thought I would give it a go.I made a frame of foam board but the rest is balsa wood including the individual tiles on the roof.
I always enjoy making these sort of buildings. They are perfect for the Wild West but will also fit in American Civil War layouts- a small town street scene. I haven't put any signage on to limit where they can be used. They are shelf displays with no detail on the back and only being about 6 inches deep. The windows are from my own resin collection and everything else is balsa.
While I was thinking what to do I suddenly got an urge to do part of Fort Tichonderoga. This is the main gate. There should be a garrison building behind the wall but I haven't added it to keep things reasonably simple. It seems the fort had a foundation of stone with the plan to build it all in stone eventually but the upper parts of the walls never got replaced from the original log construction. This is a surprisingly long piece- over 18" long so should make an impressive display with some John Jenkins French Indian War figures.
That is it for now with the photos. There is more that will be around on the day and there will be a model of Trostle farm, its barn and waggon shed as it was during the Battle of Gettysburg. This is for a customer and I have promised not to show him photos until he sees the real thing so I don't want to risk him seeing them here. There will be an article in the Toy Soldier Collector magazine later this year all about it but I will do a separate post just about that next week, after the show.
All these items are for sale at the show. If you have seen anything here that you want but can't make London then email me and if I still have it after the weekend we can sort out a sale then. If you are coming to the show then come over and have a look- they always look better in the flesh. I have things for sale to suit all pockets!
In past shows, we have been selling toy soldiers or getting rid of old stuff but this show is the first one of a new approach. I no longer have soldiers to sell so my stand is full of terrain. It takes alot of time to fill 12 feet of space with scratch built 1/30th scale terrain pieces. I just about got finished today and here are photos of the results:
most of it grouped together |
I wanted to do something set in Southern Europe as there are a few ranges around now that can use that sort of terrain. This is designed as a shelf display with it being only 6" deep. I used a photograph of a real building for inspiration with the front arches particularly catching my eye. The stone work is carved Daz Pronto air dried clay and the pan tiles are resin sheets that I have had made for me. I was going to use some other tiles but when I came to it I hadn't got enough.
This was inspired by a planned larger diorama for a customer that involves a sentry box. I really liked the idea and thought it would make an excellent stand alone piece. The arm works and most of it is made from balsa wood except the arm which is stronger pine dowelling. I really enjoyed painting the stripes.
This model was inspired by a discussion I had with a potential customer who wanted a Roman watch tower. I thought it would make a good piece to add to any Roman display so I thought I would give it a go.I made a frame of foam board but the rest is balsa wood including the individual tiles on the roof.
I always enjoy making these sort of buildings. They are perfect for the Wild West but will also fit in American Civil War layouts- a small town street scene. I haven't put any signage on to limit where they can be used. They are shelf displays with no detail on the back and only being about 6 inches deep. The windows are from my own resin collection and everything else is balsa.
While I was thinking what to do I suddenly got an urge to do part of Fort Tichonderoga. This is the main gate. There should be a garrison building behind the wall but I haven't added it to keep things reasonably simple. It seems the fort had a foundation of stone with the plan to build it all in stone eventually but the upper parts of the walls never got replaced from the original log construction. This is a surprisingly long piece- over 18" long so should make an impressive display with some John Jenkins French Indian War figures.
That is it for now with the photos. There is more that will be around on the day and there will be a model of Trostle farm, its barn and waggon shed as it was during the Battle of Gettysburg. This is for a customer and I have promised not to show him photos until he sees the real thing so I don't want to risk him seeing them here. There will be an article in the Toy Soldier Collector magazine later this year all about it but I will do a separate post just about that next week, after the show.
All these items are for sale at the show. If you have seen anything here that you want but can't make London then email me and if I still have it after the weekend we can sort out a sale then. If you are coming to the show then come over and have a look- they always look better in the flesh. I have things for sale to suit all pockets!