Playing a lot of Chain of Command, Bolt Action, and dreaming of one day getting enough napoleonics together to play a game in 28mm scale, I thought I should design my own line of 28mm buildings for a very European look, so I did.
I then got stuck for a name for the line so our snow lord graciously stepped up and gave me a hand throwing out several great ideas. I chose "Rue de Guerre" as the lines name as I thought it was both a real sounding street name and a clever play on words for a line of wargame terrain.
As you can see from the pictures, the terrain is fairly basic, there is not a huge amount of detail on the buildings. This was done on purpose for two reasons, firstly the more detail you add the longer the laser cutting time is and therefore the higher cost to produce. A major goal here was to be able to sell a set of buildings cheaply. The second reason was to provide a base set for people to work from and add their own details. There are many fine producers of terrain out there, from places that make super basic kits to ultra detailed kits, with prices all over as well. I normally aim to put enough detail that players can build, paint, use them as is, or detail them how they like, while keeping the cost as low as I can, while still justifying my time to produce.
The painting on them is rough on purpose, as I used a large brush on the beige areas and used a few different colours and just stippled it on to give a rough real world look, rather than airbrushing it on and having it super smooth. The roof and bricks were done with a base coat and then randomly picking out components and painting them in slightly off colours to form a random look. I think it worked better on the bricks than the roof, but looks ok for either.
While the buildings are designed to come apart to allow access to each floor, we rarely play with guys inside buildings as we tend to loose track of where everything is, so I just left the interiors bare.
So, I finely have my own Rue de Guerre set fully painted. Each house is roughly 5" x 5" x 6.5" to the peak of the roof (ignoring the garden on the one with an outside garden), the shop is 6" x 5" x 7", the corner building is 7" x 7" x 8", and the outbuilding (garage) is 5" x 7" x 5". Each one is almost a 6x6x6 cube, however some needs to be taken off due to the roof not taking up the full space and for the outbuilding that is a little smaller, so this is likely worth about anywhere from 80 - 100 points? Up to you Curt, I am just happy to finally have them all painted up and done for my own use!
I am tired of getting pictures from people who have bought them from me where they are all painted up and in use, and mine were still bare MDF!
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These buildings really look terrific Byron. Your relatively minimalist approach to the design and painting are very effective and the series of structures together do a great job in giving the impression of a street in a provincial French town. I particularly like the brickwork, chimneys and the sign above the Boulangerie / Patisserie. The way they break down into their separate floors is a great touch - I can see why these are popular with customers. Will you be expanding the range to a few taller buildings, a town square, or perhaps the local Hotel de Ville?
As to points, let's go with a base of 90 for the base buildings and another 30 for your efforts in the design of them. Lovely work Byron!
This is a great idea as I know many people buying very expensive MDF stuff and then spending a lot of time in providing details.
ReplyDeleteNice buildings, Byron :)
ReplyDeleteThose are good Byron!
ReplyDeleteLovely looking buildings!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Looking great Byron. I’ve just acquired a couple of these off Curt and I’m looking forward to painting them up.
ReplyDeleteThose are really fantastic Byron. I really appreciate the practice thought you put into your designs.
ReplyDeleteThank you Tom, I design based on 2 things: what I want to use, and making things as cheap as possible, because I know our hobby is expensive enough already and there has to be cheap alternatives out there that still have "some" detail.
DeleteVery cool stuff Byron.
ReplyDeleteNailed it with these excellent buildings, Byron, well done. It really is a labour of love!
ReplyDeleteThey look excellent Byron. But you'll have to paint up the other side if the street now?
ReplyDeleteLol, thanks Ray... Yes, I really should get even more painted, but I still have 5-6 large rubbermade totes full of other unpainted terrain to get to first!
DeleteWow, those are great Byron! Even better that they are your own designs! The brickwork pattern on the chimneys is superb.
ReplyDeleteGood work on the buildings Byron!
ReplyDeleteRue de Guerre is a superb name!
ReplyDelete