Saturday 18 July 2020

Oldtown

From my terrain building archives.

Oldtown or Building a dirt cheap (fantasy) village in 10 easy steps

  • 4 residential buildings with 1 floor
  • 4 residential buildings with 2 floors (first floor is lift off)
  • 1 bell tower
  • 1 smithy

 

Step 1 Collect materials:

  • corrugated cardboard
  • regular cardboard
  • (brick) textured wallpaper
  • wooden popsicle sticks / coffee stirrers
  • matchsticks/toothpicks
  • drinking straws
  • bits



Step 2 Ground floor (2 types):

  • use rectangular thick cardboard as base
  • Cut walls from corrugated cardboard
  • Glue textured wallpaper on walls (options: stone pattern, spackle pattern)
  • Cut out windows and door openings
  • Attach walls to base
  • Cut "cornerstones" from cereal box cardboard
  • Glue stones on corners and optionally around door/window bits


Type 3 chimney (see step 8)



Step 3: First floor

  • Use rectangular thick cardboard as the base (make sure the base overlaps the walls from step 2)
  • Cut walls from corrugated cardboard
  • Cut out windows openings
  • Attach walls to base
  • Glue wooden popsicle sticks / coffee stirrers on walls
  • Alternatively construct half-timbered first floor 
  • Alternatively use textured wallpaper (spackle pattern) instead of textured paint



Step 4: Smithy

Same as residential building with only ground floor and a large outside (back)wall chimney (see step 8). Leave out  front wall.



Step 5: Bell Tower

Same as residential stone buildings, only different cardboard shape and makes use of  “stepped” facade.




Step 6: Paint stone

It’s easier to paint the textured wallpaper “stones” before adding details so:

First layer: black, subsequent layers: drybrush greys, and white as finish.




Step 7: Roof

  • Cut a piece of cardboard (thicker than cereal box card, thinner than the cardboard used for the base) to size
  • Draw a line across the middle
  • Cut halfway trough with a sharp knife
  • Paint your 1 sided corrugated cardboard black (preparation for step 10)

You can get corrugated cardboard by peeling off one side of regular corrugated cardboard, but cardboard with one corrugated side is also used as packaging material.

Perils of the Warp:

In order to prevent warping roofs it’s a good idea to give the 1 sided corrugated cardboard a basecoat before cutting it into strips. This basecoat will cause the cardboard to warp, but after cutting strips from it, gluing them on the roof and drybrushing them, the roof itself will not warp.

Lesson learned: It is better to paint the roof base on which the tiles are glued black before you glue on the tiles. This prevents the lighter base being visible trough cracks between the rows of tiles.



Step 8: Chimneys

  • Cut the sides from corrugated cardboard or blocks from polystyrene depending on the type:
  • - roof chimney (type 1, polystyrene)
  • - roof chimney (type 2, polystyrene)
  • - outside wall chimney (type 3, cardboard)
  • Glue textured wallpaper on chimneys
  • Cut “cornerstones” from cereal box cardboard and glue them on corners (optional).
  • Cut small cardboard strips and glue them on to hide corrugation

Type 1 chimneys

Type 2 chimneys

Step 9 Details & roof finish**:

  • Add details: windows, curtains, wire mesh (stained glass windows), smithy interior, etc.
  • Add doors,
  • Add wooden sheds
  • Glue roof onto walls and fix with rubber bands while allowing to set
  • Add beams under roof and first floor
  • flock base
  • Attach chimney type 1 or 2
  • Cut strips from 1 sided corrugated cardboard
  • Glue strips on the roof
  • Glue wooden skewer on top ridge of roof***
  • Cut a drinking straw in half lengthwise
  • Cut small pan tiles from the halves
  • Add a line of pan tiles on the top ridge

 

Step 10 Further detailing and Paint:

  • Add lots and lots of bits (especially the smithy).
  • Paint the pieces in the desired colours.

** Actually you could shuffle a bit between step 8, 9 and 10. To prevent paint getting on the wire mesh it is easier to paint the window ledges first and subsequently add the mesh, curtains, etc and then glue the roof on the walls. Chimneys type 1 & 2 can also be attached later.

*** I only found this out after my first idea didn’t work. The ridge without the skewer has insufficient surface for  gluing the pan tiles. Inserting a wooden skewer increases that surface. (see sketch)








Finished town







No comments:

Post a Comment