Sunday, May 12, 2019
Grist Mill
The Grist Mill is a beautiful building which will liven up any table top. It reminds me of the one at Old Sturbridge Village which I have visited many times. It could also make a interesting objective in a game as a source of supplies to help a army, or to prevent another side from using it.
It is also the most difficult building I have yet put together from Impudent Mortal. This has to do with the wheel first, and the various doors, door says and window sills. Lots of small parts which could get lost or forgotten about. But it is worth it for the finished Grist Mill is beautiful.
My suggestion is to study the instructions and pictures of the finished mill first. Lay out all the pieces and arrange them by instruction page. This will assist you in figuring out where things go and if you are missing anything. Then carefully put the pieces together without glue to see how they fit. Only then start to glue them.
In the end the Grist Mill is a lot of work, but it provides a wonderful centrepiece to your table top and a unusual item not often seen. Highly recommended as Hal would say!
Saturday, May 11, 2019
Cabin with front porch
Now that I am getting the hang of this I tried a slightly more complicated kit. I would recommend reading the instructions and just placing the pieces together before gluing. Good thing I did this first! Saved myself a lot of aggravation. But what I got from it is a very nice addition to my growing list of houses for the table top. Next I plan on tackling one of the bigger buildings. The Grist Mill!
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Stone house
Another kit from Impudent Mortals. As it looked simple I put this together next. It was pretty simple. Especially with the free instructions provided at the site. Again, a cost of paint brings the house to life.
Monday, May 6, 2019
Covered Bridge
To learn about how to put these MDF kits together I started with the covered bridge. I am not so sure how authentic it is for the time period I game in. But it looks nice and reminds me of the one at Old Sturbridge Village here in Massachusetts. Since they do a large Rev War weekend each year I could do a table top battle of the mock tactical they put on!
Instructions for the kit are available through Impudent Mortal site as a free down load. It was very helpful. The owner of the site who I bought these from at Cold Wars warned me about using a super glue since you cannot correct errors you make. I used Annie's tacky glue from Michael's which worked excellent. A sharpe hobby knife is recommended in case you need to trim parts.
The bridge went together in minutes! Very easy. Next I sprayed it black and painted it with craft paints. I have to say that painting it really improves the kit and brings it to life.
Done, and a fine looking addition to my table top it us! More to follow. BTW, river is from Battlefield Terrain Concepts.
Impudent Mortals MDF buildings
Among the items I bought at Cold Wars this year were a number of MDF buildings. Most of these were by a new (to me) company called Impudent Mortal (https://www.impudentmortal.com). They make a wide variety of interesting items. These include paint racks and buildings. The buildings include a number of North American 25mm type structures which fit in nicely for my Rev War and 1812 table tops. The prices are very reasonable and they also bundle buildings in evan more reasonably priced packages. I bought the bundle which included a really nice Georgian House (I want to get a couple more of these). Perfect for my time periods. The company has on line instructions available directly to down load to assist in assembling the buildings.
I am having great fun with these. They go together very well and paint up nicely. I think they will give my table top a lift. And provide some structures to fight about in future games. Perhaps the nefarious Canadian Volunteer will want to wreak havoc on a small village in a future game? Stay tuned to see!
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