Friday, December 13, 2013

Packing up...


As I was furiously constructing these boxes, Lyn Stahl of mini painting fame happened to ask me why I didn't just get boxes from the Post Office.  She then got a dissertation on my experiences of 20+ years of shipping artwork of all kinds.  Sorry about that!

So what do you do when you have to ship minis?  With recent changes by the Post Office, I have had to adapt my methods yet again... slightly.


I told Lyn that I construct all my own boxes for a variety of reasons, the first being strength.  You can see here that I have created these sections inside the box... which is also lined with a layer of cardboard.

Everything is glued together.  All of these extra pieces provide protection against vertical and lateral crushing, which is real important shipping these fragile minis! 

I also custom build them to avoid having lots of extra space inside the box.  Not only will it be more expensive to fill that will all kinds of packing materials, it will be heavier, and the figure inside has more chances to move around.  None of those things are good!


While most of our boxes are generously donated by our recycling minded friends, I also find giant boxes made of heavy cardboard out in the alley.  Or, I save them on the rare occasion when something heavy comes our way.
This board is perfect for those interior pieces!


Here is a box that I have specifically shaped for 2 pieces.  These days, you must have a box that is big enough to fit those computer generated labels that you have to print out.  Those are usually around 5 x 7 inches.

However, boxes of certain weights and sizes will whack you with all sorts of extra charges, so beware of that.


Here you can see the interior pieces being glued to the inside walls.


Getting there.  You can already see the mutual support these pieces offer.


Then it's time to pre-fit the miniature for the all important cross piece.  This is the one that really keeps the compression to a minimum from the top and the sides...


When one piece is a lot shorter than the other, I use white styrofoam to fill the void.  Light and soft.


This is what I use to cut all that cardboard.  It is my old mat-cutting machine.  A little sad that this is what it does 85% of the time, but the 2D art is mostly a thing of the past.  The other 15% is building terrain.

I used this to prefab a lot of the parts that went into the terrain making videos.


Once all the glue has set, it is time for the minis.  Those are wrapped in tissue first, making sure to fill the 'voids' between arms and weapons, etc.  Then some bubble wrap around the tissue.

Finally, if I have it available, I will use foam pieces to plug the additional gaps around the bubble wrap.  These were kindly donated by Phil!  Thanks!


Thursday, December 12, 2013

Let the trumpets sound...


I have really been looking forward to this miniature, since it completes the Drow version of the Vestal Command figures.  I definitely enjoy the darker color scheme of the skin.  It lets me play around much more with some subtle midtones.


All of these have been painted in the same way as the video.  A combination of Shaded Basecoat, glazing and the work in the all important midtones.  There I mixed my glaze colors with regular paint to create those semi-transparent 'light glazes'  Lots of fun working with those!


She is also here:


Wandering back to the Dragon


As most of you already know, there has been a certain project that has kept me imprisoned in the basement for 20 hours a day for many months.  Also, Cathy has her new job, about 3 months in.

This combination of factors has kept us away from one of our favorite places, and that is the Wandering Dragon Shoppe.

The original store was an amazing place, which you can see form my previous posts.  Late this summer, they moved down the street to a larger place to accommodate all the other folks who loved that place just as much.

If it is possible to upgrade this much on amazing, then only Kevin and Laura can pull that off!  Even from the outside, the place is marvelous.  Here is Kevin, hard at work as usual when not running around seeing what people might need.


All of the new space is put to great use.  There were so many new games I had never seen before... and there was room after room of them!


This is one of those rooms.  What's nice is that you feel like you can really take your time to check everything out and never be in someone's way.  Since they are in various rooms, you also feel like you can talk things out without bothering anyone else.


There were more gaming rooms than I could take pictures of!  And they are even more inviting.  You feel like you are playing at someone's house.


Ah, did someone mention miniatures?  And paint, and brushes, and files, and tons of hobby stuff?  Yes indeed!


More rooms for gaming!  Note that binder on top of the vending machine... that comes into play later.  Yes, there are a number of vending machine options.


And then the Main Gallery... still with the TV to keep up to speed on ESPN... and it is still very cool!


There are now multiple shelving units of games to test out now!


And when you don't want to interrupt your game for food, you just check out that binder to find a place to order that food, and have them deliver it.  We enjoyed some pizza with Memoire '44


And one of our last go 'rounds.  A neat system, which appeals to me more than ASL, since there is much more fun visual impact here.  It still had a similar feel, but faster paced.

Many thanks to Rich for hauling me out there, and congratulations to Kevin and Laura for all their amazing work here!!!


Wednesday, December 11, 2013

All I want for Christmas...


OK folks... one more Raging Heroes image presentation since I was not able to process the pics of the new painted minis yet!


I will definitely have to include some banners in my IG army after seeing these gals!


The kiddies will be perfect urchins for the Underhive of my display board.  They will not be part  of the army itself, in all likelihood, but definitely a part of the display.


Seraphim?  YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Here is an example of fin concept art becoming...


An incredible miniature!  Very faithful to details of the art, but also solid as a miniature.  This has been the case throughout.  Glad there are Vox's in the army list already! :-)


Old timey


Here's another one of those test figures for the video project.  Some of you may recognize this set of colors.


I used them on the Ultraforge Demon Prince.  Essentially, it was an extension of the 'Raging Reds' video, which used a full range of red colors. There was a mix of warmer and cooler, saturated vs grayed down, and so on.


Playing with those two mechanisms is a whole lot of fun these days.  Years ago, when I was trying to figure it out during and right after art school, it drove me nuts!  Warm colors come forward, cool colors recede.  That is, unless the warm color is grayed down, and the cool color is high chroma!

It has long since become second nature.  Even more fun, since I get to do that in 3D!!


Tuesday, December 10, 2013

This will be sooooo much fun!


OK!  More anticipation from Raging Heroes.  If brushes could drool, they would over these minis!  This will be amazing.  Knowing in advance that I won't have to fight the details on these just makes it better.

All too often, I have had to figure out what the heck I am trying to paint on a miniature.  A detail on it is poorly sculpted (or ends up in an attachment joint or mould joint), leading to painting misery.


It's not as if the entire figure is awful to paint, but you wonder where the lips or eyes actually begin or end, etc.  Never had that happen with a Raging Heroes face.  That's why I chose them for all the skin tone videos, since the faces could be sen much more easily.


They also have some seriously fun poses!  Very dynamic!


Need artillery pieces?  Here's some mobile firepower.


Need mascots?  They got 'em.  Someone to keep Walter and Charlie company!


Testing... testing...


Some of you might recognize this Reaper Yvonne from the Sky Earth Painting Pyramid video.

Long before the Kickstarter ever went online, we spent many weeks figuring out which subjects to cover, which set they should be a part of, and so on.

When it came to the videos (and the color theory episodes in particular), I tried to base the demand by the most frequently asked questions that I received.  I counted comments and questions on the blog, in person, on facebook, etc.


One of the subjects I wanted to save for 'Post Kickstarter' was painting white.  This was a test figure to see how viable that was, and which miniature would work out best.  Of all the colors I wanted to cover, this has the most subtleties.  While it is not reflective like metal, it is still very much affected by its environment.


Yes, there was a lot of work that went on way behind the scenes :-)  A number of figures were prepped and never painted, prepped and partially painted, and even those taken to completion.

Sometimes I felt like the figure was not quite right, or that there was not enough or too much information to convey on a certain topic.  While I wanted some synergy between episodes, I didn't want to go overboard on crossover!

She is also here: