Since I have been posting so much about the Temple of Blood, I thought it would be fun to share some images taken during its construction. I can't find my earliest photos of the very beginning stages, so I will update this if I can find them :-)
This is, in fact, the second Temple of Blood. I made the first one many years ago, entirely out of sculpey! It weighed a ton, of course, and that would not be practical for an army board/terrain piece at tournaments, etc.
As you can see, most of it was built out of foam core, which is strong and light. It is also possible to 'weather' it almost as well as I could with sculpey. While I was putting together the lower levels, I realized that I needed to widen the temple to accommodate movement trays. Not just for display, but also for fighting!
On the ground level, I used baked sculpey that was carved to match all the bases and movement trays of my units. The Blood Moat texture was built up with flex paste, and then painted with a blend of water effects and red gore.
These first images give you a pretty good idea of how it was built:
Those images show you the serpent columns, which were also made of sculpey. The fun little altar is visible here.
Those images show the whole edifice completed, with ample amounts of sand and gravel scattered all over the kitchen. It was like a day at the beach for several hours, minus the broken bottles. Now on to the painting...
Once the vast majority of it was painted, it was time to put on the vegetation. Wow, that was a huge mess! I started by placing all the plastic aquarium plants, anchoring them with green stuff. I grabbed several types of flock and static grass to do the majority of the temple, using a big tray to collect the avalanche of unglued debris which kept falling. I was able to save that and use it on the Temple.
Since then I added a 6 inch by 2 foot section to the front of the board to make it more viable for Armies on Parade display. I will post those images tomorrow.
Enjoy!
A collection of images that feature my painted miniatures. It features many of my award winning figures and terrain pieces painted since 2001.
Pages
- Home
- Blood Bowl Teams
- Step By Step: Painting a Predator
- Using the 'Shaded Basecoat' Technique to paint Saurus warriors
- Step By Step armor for Tomb Kings Horsemen
- Step by Step painting of a Gamezone Cold One
- Painting a marble and tile flying base
- How I photograph my miniatures: A window into my photo booth
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
nice terrain piece, though I don't really know how to put it, but your blood is kind of lacking realism. Although I don't know how you did it, I'll show you this tutorial http://massivevoodoo.blogspot.com/2010/05/tutorial-how-to-paint-blood.html, in which really good and realistic looking blood is painted, I think this would add very much to this already nice terrain piece. Furthermore would you mind to telle me how you are glueing your plants into place? :)
ReplyDeleteNice construction and painting.It is a job well done. Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteThis will probably remain my favorite display board :-)
DeleteKind of reminds me of the one troll temple in WoW, awesome piece for sure!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words!!! :-)
DeleteThis is amazing! Would you be willing to share in more detail how each step was done. I do not have your talent, but I would love to attempt to build something similar. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words! I don't have any other images of this piece (it was done about 4 years ago), but if you look in the terrain building section of the blog, you will find dozens of articles that will be extremely helpful! :-) Cheers!
Delete