The next evolution of Hyam's landing is to make sense of the spaces with dividers and connectors. No human settlement is comprised of a selection of completely separate buildings - there are walls and hedge, roads, alleys and fences. I got Graham at Grimsforge to make me a selection of structures that I can place against or inbetween my existing buildings to try and emulate that real urban feel.
The new structures are four walls with access points in them (solid walls to come at some future point. Like the rest of my Grimsforge terrain, I drew up what I hoped would look cool, and then Graham built them for me mainly from card.
And realised in 3D:
I painted up the walls / entrances to go with the rest of the terrain - pretty basic paintjobs with the added dust, dirt and grime to make it look lived in. I did also have a bit of fun with some graffiti and posters.
Secure gateway
Stepped access
Colonnade
Security Scanner
Looking forward to getting these into some future games!
Stealing it!
ReplyDeleteSteal away!
DeleteThanks Jimmy! That's suburban sprawl for you 😉
ReplyDeleteI love that you are adding these little parts to build this fully realized town. Great concepts, great execution, and wonderful paint jobs. The graffiti looks very natural ...in that, it's what I would see in a city.
ReplyDeleteI'm with Carmine, I'm going to steal some of these ideas for my eventual settlement!
Thanks Hobbs! It's all about trying to make some cool little corners that look like they make sense. I did spend some valuable time researching graffiti tags too!
DeleteReally nice work. Great urban vibe to it. Can I ask where did the figure with the spray can come from? I've been looking for something like that.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much! The spray can figure is a Judge Dredd perp from Citadel. Now OOP, but they do pop up on ebay pretty frequently.
DeleteLovely work! The style of the pieces really fits your other terrain, and they go together very well. That's not a nod to Peter Hyams who made Outland, is it?
ReplyDeleteThanks Toby. As it happens I've not seen Outland, but as soon as I saw it's a 1980s sci-fi thriller, I realise I absolutely must!
DeleteHyams is after the character that Tony Hough illustrated for an unpublished 40k novel: http://magpieandoldlead.blogspot.com/2016/11/hyams-story-that-was-never-told.html
That's really interesting! I never knew about Hyams. I wonder who was going to write it?
DeleteOutland isn't a bad film, and the set design is brilliant. Well worth a look.
I wish I knew too! Tony's illustrations are the only evidence of the project it seems.
DeleteJust more goodness to add to an already fantastic setup. That security scanner is such a good idea too.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dai! I probably should have added some sort of extermination device on the inside of the security scanner to eliminate undesirables!
DeleteThey all are creative, not mere walls, but each of them with a particular flavour, I find them really enjoyable!
ReplyDeleteThanks Suber! I will be adding some blank ordinary walls as well, but I really wanted something with a lot of character.
DeleteVery nifty!
ReplyDeleteGlad you like them!
DeleteSo much planning seems to have gone into this work i.e. the "blueprints". The things we do for this hobby :)
ReplyDeletePlanning is all part of the fun!!
DeleteThe open arch is my favourite, it creates a border and a link at once, you can move through it but can't quite see through so that's very intersting gaming wise and visually too.
ReplyDeleteI love that one too, it definitely conveys space and boundary nicely. Plus it looks cool!
DeleteSome great inspiration for my own scifi settlement
ReplyDeleteFantastic! Looking forward to seeing yours develop.
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