Painting an average of at least one pre slotta Citadel miniature every week (my new years resolution 2011)
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Saturday, May 17, 2025
Revisiting the Ruins of Mordheim
Click on the pics to enlarge them
The Mordheim buildings that came with the box set are wonderful. Printed with a great strong color theme and assembled with 3d plastic pieces they enhanced the game; providing a playable set of buildings, and providing the wonderful miniatures with a rich consistent back drop.
So, naturally, I was not satisfied.
Assembled over 20 years ago, my set has seen fantasy skirmishes, pirate raids and even been pushed into service for Bolt Action. I suspect the biggest contributor to their longevity has been that I mounted them on sturdy hardboard bases. This added rigidity and allows the bases to have a modicum of rubble (mostly cheap clay cat litter). A realistic amount of rubble would probably be unplayable.
The hardboard bases were wrapped in photocopies of the early GW Dungeon Floor Plans and painted with a wash to provide each building with a pavement/sidewalk of flagstones. When placed on a board with texture and paint the buildings create an instant street.
The first couple of buildings I built, as instructed.. but they obviously needed floor joists. Somehow thin floors made only of boards are more unrealistic than walls made from a single layer of plaster. (at least the walls were printed to look like they had layers). So, I added floor joists in painted balsa.
These added bits of wood have held up ok, but most of the buildings have lost a few that I need to replace. The red 3 story has lost a window that I think is put aside.. somewhere.
After just two buildings I decided that thin walls were not doing it for me, so added foamcore walls to the interior (leaving the exterior faces).The inside faces and edges were painted to match the overall tone of the set.
Then I moved on to making my own buildings. Scratch built but using the plastic parts and similar colors to maintain the overall consistent look. The quoins on the house below are card painted to look like the original plastic ones. designing my own allowed me to add stairs and interior walls, and to build a larger building for the waterfront with a more commercial (less residential) feel.
Finally, I made a couple of character pieces
I have always enjoyed making scenery out of whatever I can find. Garage sale/car boot sale toys can be a great source of durable parts. The ruined cathedral walls are part of the 40K boxed set at the time and were very easy, and inexpensive to pick up. The base is hard molded plastic and came from a 1991 game by Parker called The Great Museum Caper - a 3d version of Clue/Cludo. The result was very durable, and like the buildings, includes it own sidewalk.
And for the center piece, Sigmar's Temple bell tower.
This model uses some of the plastic components of a Disney playset combined with foamboard, cardboard, plastic sheet, an empire knight and a metal devil from the C18 undead series, and various plastic kit bits. I'm going to add a base and maybe a wing or two during this round of repairs and restoration. Also it had a twin tailed comet weather vain that has been lost a needs replacing.
Overall - Beautiful scenery that has stood the test of time.
As well as repairs I am adding some new 3d printed pieces to my set and trying to stay with the original vision - I'm using some ruined building pieces by Gothic Things (MyMiniFactory). And I have found I can easily create 3d versions of the original Dungeon Floor Plans to base them on. (ImageToStl.com).
In other news - the last group of preslotta Citadel goblins are starting to leave my paint table so before too long I'll be putting up more of them. And.. my goal to finish all the figures I have started but left unfinished over the years is off to a productive start - but I keep realizing there are more...
Cheers
Caius
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
More than Mordheim
Click on the pics to enlarge
Lots of old Citadel and Metal Magic wandering around an open market
When Mordheim came out 25 years ago I loved it.
I built a city base out of a sheet of foam with sand and paint and water created from a sheet of clear crackle plastic from a 2 x 4 flourescent light fixture with the underside painted. The base has not survived but I have some of the awesome miniatures and two boxes of ruined buildings that have seen a great deal of play.
So with Mordheim play growing and several other city based skirmish games in play, its time to build a new base and clean and repair some card and balsa buildings.
My new base is 4' square (1.2m x 1.2m) and made of four 2'x2' sections. Each section starts with a gator board base (water level). City level is built up with 2" rigid foam topped with pva glue, sand and paint. The harbour walls are a mix of 3D resin prints - some from Ancrabourg by 3DLayeredScenery (which I had to modify using Blender since I only wanted the outside faces) and some by Gothic Things. The built-in tower bases and the rubble roads inbedded in the top are also by Gothic Things. The water level is paint and then two rough brush layers of AK Water Gel (a mix of swamp green and atlantic blue)
The board is designed for several configurations and the riser at the back is movable.
My biggest mistake I made was not keeping some of the water paint for additional future board options.
Mordheim in Ruins
Modified buildings from the original set, some scratchbuild ones, and some resin prints.
Thriving Market Town
Buildings: Large scratch built inn in the center and a selection of resin (Tabletop World) and 3D prints by various designers but Gothic Things features heavily because their buildings work well for small or medium sized resin printer. Wizard tower in the back is Printable Scenery. The docks are Lemax Dept 56 village stuff i got at a garage sale, as are many of the crates. The rigged boat is a converted Little Mermaid toy, the larger nearer boat is Reaper, and the far one came home in my stuff from Adepticon one year and I have have no idea who it belongs to!
The third build option is a necropolis combining a huge variety of graveyards, crypts, and ruins.
But... most of them dont have so much as a lick of paint yet and I need a few more to fill the board so pictures will happen another time.
Cheers. C
Sunday, February 2, 2025
The Citadel Giant
Weighing in at 3 Lb. 10 oz. (1,636g) and 7" tall (190mm)
The 1983 Citadel Giant
Alan Perry
and in the Red corner JOHAN!- a standard 28mm Citadel villager (for scale)
100mm base. No original metal base so I suppose he is even heaver.
Weight and size were an issue. I haven't painted anything this big and heavy before that needed precision. I have buildings that are bigger but they are light and easy to manipulate. After a start where handling was rubbing off work I had just done I ended up mounting him to a half gallon square plastic can of paint. It made it heaver but provided a counterbalance. Significantly reduced wrist strain.
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
Setting Myself Up to Fail
So the New Year rolled over and I met my annual resolution of at least 52 pre-slotta Citadel miniatures painted. (52 goblins, Jabberwoky, Giant beetle, 2 hydrae and the Owl), I met the goal months ago and have been happily pottering with some buildings, my Mordheim board and an assortment of monsters (including the big fella ready for a pedicure pictured below ,
During the new year someone posted this funny thing.
26 goblins to finish the set - and a couple of GnollsThe three big demons and the big fella aboveBut what if this year I committed do doing just that?
If I only count projects I have started - and I always start with basing
I reckon have enough Citadel pre-slotta to count as 52 - click on the pics to enlarge.
A tray of Citadel villagers and townsfolkA tray with a wide variety of other villagers & townsfolk
Some vintage metal adventurersA tray of old metal monsters - Inc a couple of Citadel dragons
And a tray of one-piece-plastics, mostly from modern era games
My unfinished pile of shame.
(There are prolly also some 32mm pirates & citizens and a few heroic scale adventurers if I dig)
I'm gonna try and get them all done this year
Disclaimer - Unfinished pile of shame does not include partially assembled buildings and scenery elements. While no miniatures will be started till the pile has been depleted this does not include buildings or scenery. Also repairs and touch-ups or rebasing previously painted miniatures do not count no matter how extensive or who painted them.
Cheers!
Monday, January 20, 2025
Plastic game pieces from the early 90's
Early board games with fantasy components in hard plastic. I am old enough that when these games came out I sneered at them, compared them to my metal figs and gave them a pass. A decade later when they showed up in garage sales I picked them up for particular pieces or for cheap regiments. Later still, I used them to introduce my kids to roleplaying and painting. And now they are a collectable subgenre I think of as One Piece Plastics. Their originally slightly-too-large scale is now "heroic". And now when new games come boxed with a pile of fantasy minis I pay attention and some get added to lead, plastic and resin pile.
Recently we had a mini break in NY state and though we had some vacationy outings planned my wife announced that she wanted a couple of days curled up with a book in front of a fire, so I should bring my paints. Not wanting to pack half finished metal I grabbed eight primed and based old plastics and some bold colors.
Dark World
Mattel 1991
Forked tongue added to the manticore - It really needed a fix.
Click on the pics to enlarge
Dragonfire
Heartbreaker/Target 1992
This game came with just the four types of figure
The Dragon Knight has always struck me as a teenage wannabe chaos knight. The embarrassing son of the grim countenanced Dark Lord who sighs heavy as his pathetic minions fail yet again to thwart a party of bold halfling children.
Previous One Piece Plastics Posts:
HeroQuest and other game plastics
http://leadnpaint.blogspot.com/2017/07/
https://leadnpaint.blogspot.com/2021/12/plastics-too.html
Doorways for HQ and AHQ are here
Saturday, January 18, 2025
Uncommon Monsters
I have a couple of projects to share that wrapped up last year.
The first is a group of monsters
Click on the pictures to enlarge
Citadel - C29 Giant Owl
Nick Bibby 1985
40mm base with scratch built tree stump
Citadel - C29 Giant Beetle - 1985
40mm base
Citadel - C27 Hydrae 1984
30x60 oval bases
Citadel - FF35 Manticore 1981
I painted this 10 years ago as part of the FF set but I had managed to break off a wing. So he got repaired and repainted.
The FF set is here: https://leadnpaint.blogspot.com/2014/09/
Jabberwocks
Citadel C29 1985 and Ral Partha 01-095 1982
Tom Meier
Wonderful classic figures based on the original illustration
Grenadier - Monster Manuscript
John Dennett 1986
Elementals MM20-MM23 - 40mm bases