BROADSWORD MINIATURES

Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 June 2025

Blow Wind Blow Part3

 I've finished the windmill ( apart from applying flock to the base).

Overall I'm quite happy with it. The sails are a bit on the small side, but any longer and I think they would have been a hindrance to transport and storage.

I'll set some pictures up on a proper tabletop one day, but here it is on the unholy mess of my workbench.

A Bavarian pikeman lays claim to the mill on behalf of the Emperor.
I added a worn millstone from Debris of War .

The ladder and tiller came out fairly well.

I was pleased with the brickwork, painting a light colour to represent the mortar and then dry brushing brick red


I've just watched a very good video on
 YouTube about the siege of Leiden in 1573. The defenders moved windmills
 from outside the walls and reassembled
 them within to provide flour.

I'm just chopping up some coffee stirrers to make some artillery bases , so hopefully I'll be posting those soon.











Sunday, 15 June 2025

The Gallows Tree

 While I was in the terrain making mood, and the primer on the windmill was drying, I knocked up a couple of pieces that would have been seen all over Europe in the 17c.



Here are a couple of examples of paintings with gallows evident, and if course there's the well known Magpie on the gallows by Breughel.


Here's my version so far.

There is a bit more of a twist on them than is visible in this picture, just to show the warped wood as in the last painting above.

Also a leaning crucifix. 



Hopefully these will add some flavour to the 17c tabletop.







Friday, 13 June 2025

Blow Wind Blow Part2

 I've finished all the modifications to the windmill kit, so it's ready for priming.

I added more bits of balsa to the sails as I thought they still didn't look organic enough.

Front and rear 

and the 'axle' end was made from the end of an old paintbrush.

The ladder, tiller and tilting mechanism are completed.

I then coated all the additions with Modpodge for extra strength and to hopefully disguise any visible printing ridges.

I was pleased to discover this was a common design in England as well as Northern Europe, so it will be usable in ECW games too. Ready to undercoat now. I'll attach the sails after painting, and add a few extra details.

Finally Sunrise from the Growlery (my mancave ) window this morning.




Tuesday, 10 June 2025

Blow Wind Blow Part 1

 Having painted loads of TYW figures ( which I will get around to showing you), I have begun to think I need some bespoke terrain. Something like this windmill for instance, painted by Sebastian Vrancx in the early 17c.


I had already purchased a secondhand windmill at Lincombe Barn Tabletop sale a few years ago, but while the top part was ideal, the base wasn't.


I think this model was from the old Ian Weekly range, cast in a kind of hard
 foam. I originally bought it for goblins to live in, but that project will have to wait.

I suppose I could have made the lower part and ladder I needed, but I found a 3d printed windmill kit on eBay which would work perfectly. 

So here we are so far 
Windy helps with the repairs adding an extra step.

The lower half with some alterations to make it more like the Vrancx painting above, such as adding risers on top of the brick foundations, and extending the central post.

I added some spars to the sails to make it a look a bit more ramshackle. The original print was very neat and tidy, and looking at other paintings of windmills or the time the sails often look warped and rotten.


(Note the bright colourful clothing of the rustics. Not everything was black and covered in crap as modern Hollywood would have us believe).

After the glue on the spars had dried I added some furled sails made from some linen tied with thread. I'm not a windmill expert, but I think the sails are rolled aside when the mill isn't in use, during storms or times of battle.


The next detail was the 'tiller' ( I must get a book on the proper terminology, but this seems the right word), with which the miller turns the mill to face the wind. The 3d one that came with the kit was straight, but in all the paintings I found, it's curved through the ladder . Happily the resin the kit was made from bends easily when held in hot water.


Now I've got the headache of fitting it through the steps....

To be continued....