Tuesday, March 2, 2021

More pictures of my growing village

 

 Just an excuse to post a few mire pictures of the growing village of houses from Things from the Basement.  One thing these pictures have shown me us the need to get some sort of background picture!  I do not think people want to look at boxes and other things in the room.  Also, most of the fun items scattered throughout these pictures like the geese, sheep and cat are from the Hovels catalog.  They are fun items which add a lot to your table top terrain.

















Monday, March 1, 2021

St. David's Day

 



  " 1st March 1775;  This being St. David's Day the officers of the 23rd Regiment, or Royal Welch Fusiliers, dinned together according to the custom.  All the General & Staff Officers, the Admiral, and several other person's were invited to dine with the Regiment...."

From the diary of Lieutenant Frederick MacKenzie.


   The "custom" was on each Saint David's Day following dinner the regimental goat with the drummers and fifers are led around the mess table.  The drum major has a silver plate with raw leeks and the mess sergeant carries a loving cup filled with champagne. They halt by the newest joined officer who then stands on his chair with his left foot and places his right foot on the table and eats a leek while the drummers play a continuous roll.  Once he has consumed the leek he is handed the loving cup and before drinking toasts "And Saint David!"  All present who have not eaten a leek, including guests are expected to do so. Similar ceremonies occurs in the sergeants and the other ranks mess.  This custom, described as "ancient" in 1775  is still observed in peace and during war time up to the present time.





Friday, February 26, 2021

Painting 18th Century New England Houses

 

For those of you that may buy the historical New England  buildings from "Things from the Basement" and are curious how to paint  them here is some historical information I found.  The following information was from the Ipswich Historical Society web page.   The original article can be found here:   https://historicipswich.org/colors/)


This is a great guide they created to help home owners paint their older homes to stay within the colonial period.  Please consider that this guide is for New England.  Other regions of the colonies and Canada were different both in architecture and style.  Also that this is just a guide and not a definitive end all authority.  I have followed it in my painting for houses for my American Rev War and War of 1812 houses.  I post it here to explain why I did what I did and to help out others.  If you have different or other information please feel free to drop me a line.  I am always interested in learning more.


 COLONIAL AND FEDERAL period from 1640-1840. Paint was used on the three main parts of Colonial and Federal houses exteriors.  These were:

Body: the walls – usually clapboarded or shingled, sometimes boarded.

Trim: the decorative woodwork that framed the large wall surfaces and often the smaller elements such as windows and doors.

Sash: The movable elements – doors, windows, shutters.

Period houses rarely painted trim and sash in different colors and so were generally of two colors only; later styles often had three.



Colonial Period (1640-1780)

Architecture: asymmetry, verticality. 17th-century colors were derived from earth, stone or other natural pigments.

Body: clapboards, originally not painted or stained but weathered to dark brown. 

Trim: Unpainted or painted red/ brown to contrast with unpainted body.


Second Period or Georgian (1725-1780)

These houses favored stronger colors from naturally derived pigments. Colors imitating stone construction were popular exteriors, interiors were bolder and brighter than once thought.

Modest and rural houses often not painted. Strongly contrasted color schemes favored.

Body: dark stone colors, chocolates, orange, ochers, greys and reds.

Trim: Almost always white, but a softer, yellower white than today’s white. Cornices, window and door casings, cornerboards and molded details often simulated stone – pale grey, yellowish-white, very pale blue, sometimes with sand blown into the wet paint.

Doors: always dark color – chocolate, red, green or blue.

Roofs: occasionally red, chocolate or yellow



Federal Period (1780-1830)

Fashionable taste moved away from the more robust Georgian toward lighter colors: white, off-white, pale shades of stony gray, and ochre. Bright, clear tones in interiors, often in contrast with pale trim – creams, pumpkins, sage green, muted blues etc. The 1812 painting guide by Hezekiah Reynolds of CT advised a palette of “white, cream, straw, orange, pea-green, parrot green, grass green, red, slate and black.” Lighter colors were fashionable, but darker ones were still used for more traditional tastes. Contrasts were less marked than on Georgian houses.

Body: White, cream, straw were fashionable, but orange, pea-green, red, slate met more conservative, traditional tastes.

Trim: White, or sometimes the same color as the body. Shutters and doors were dark green or black.

House fronts were sometimes painted in fashionable, lighter (and more expensive) colors, while the back and/or the sides were in the more traditional, and cheaper, reds.

Rural houses were often unpainted until the middle of the 19th century



Tuesday, February 23, 2021

New England houses from "Things from the Basement"

 

   In addition to the Salem Meeting House Things from the Basement has also released two New England style houses.  These can be built as is, or you can add the extension kits to make them into the traditional salt box style homes.  I have chosen to add the extension as I really like that style and worked inside that type of house during my career with the park service.  Both houses are alike so I will just describe building one of them to give you an idea of how they go together.  A second post will go into how to paint these period houses and how I painted them.

  First off I lay out the parts sheet to familiarize myself with them.  After downloading the assembly plans from the site I am ready to start putting these together.  I use superglue to assembly the building.  I then usually add a beading of white glue along the inside edges for added strength.  




  One of the nice details is the windows of these buildings.  There are two parts and you snap out the windows and ledge you want.  I tend to do these all at one, assembly line fashion.  Glue the window to the ledge and then push it through into the opening.  These give a nice effect and each has great details.  



Also note there are two doors for each building.  One fancy, which I will use for the front and the others plain which I will use for the back.  


Next step is glue the four walks to the floor.  Again take A moment to fit the pieces together before you glue them.  You may want to secure them with a rubber band as they dry.  There is a second floor to the building which you can just drop in.  This is for skirmish type gaming.  I glue the floor for added strength as I do not bother putting figures into the buildings.  I also glue down the roof but you do not have to.





Lay out the chimney assembly.  I suggest carefully fitting it together before gluing.  Its a little fidgety so take your time.  Same with adjusting the roof around it.  Make sure the glue is dry on the chimney and take your time fitting it together.  When done fit to the house.  You can glue it to the house or not to fit your games.






  Lastly, once together I assembled the extension.  No need to go into the details.  It fits to the main house easily.  once done you have a great little house put together to grace your table top terrain.  Well, actually two houses with this kit!  


Next time I will go into a little about historical home colors in New England in the 17th and 18th century as well as how I have painted these homes.  See you then! 


Hey!  Get your chickens off my lawn!


Update:





The second one house you get in the package us slightly different then the one I built here.  So you get two of the same house types but both are slightly different. More value for the money. Well done!









Saturday, February 20, 2021

Building the Salem Meeting House kit

 




  Most meeting houses in New England in the 17th and 18th century were plain, box like structures.   They were practical and not for show.  Some, like the one on Lexington Green were almost barn like.  Too many wargame churches look like late 19th century structures and are very wrong for the time period I game.  So I was most excited to get this model for my American Rev War and War of 1812 battles.  Plus I really like the models from "Things from the Basement" and knew this would be a good addition to my collection of buildings. The gentleman who runs Things from the Basement does a outstanding job and make truly outstanding models.  Highly recommend!

  The Salem Meeting House is based on the replica that was built for the movie "Three Sovereigns for Sarah" about the Salem Witch trials.  You can visit it at the Rebecca Nurse house in Danvers Massachusetts.  The site is run by the Danvers Alarm company, a reenactment group portraying a American militia company on April 19, 1775.  They are a excellent group, extremely authentic and very knowledgeable about the period.  They have maintained and managed the Nurse house and its property.  It's worth your time to visit them.

Now,onto the MDF building!



Before starting I lay out all the parts and review the down loadable instructions.  Once familiar with them I start construction.  I use a superglue to put the building together.


I start by putting together the windows and doors.  



Simple but clever.  I think that these add period charm to the building and give it personality.  They go together very easily.


Next, after fitting the walls together to get a good fit I glue them together and put a rubber band around them to hold them tight while the glue dried.  






I finish the entry way and glue the windows and doors into placce.







Next the roof is put together.  The rafters requires careful fitting and patience.  But once dine tit fits very nicely in place.  If you ate going to use it with figures inside in skirmish games do not glue the roof onto the building.




Once put together the meeting house looks great and I am sure will fit on my table rather nicely.  To give a scale of the building I have put a Fife and Drum miniature in front.  Next up I will be painting the building using the actual structure as a guide.

 Most 17th and 18th century buildings in New England were not painted.  Instead they were stained.  Windows and trim may have been painted and they usually show up in period illustrations as a light color.  This is a rule of thumb and of course there are exceptions.  For my buildings I was looking for a stained look much like I did with the William Smith house.  I included the two photos if the actual house at the top of the post to show how the stain looks at different times of the year and in different light.


I started out with the citidal stain.  I put a couple of light stains over the building.  for the roof I mixed in a little black paint to give it a darker shade.  Later I lightly sanded a few spots on the walls to show weathering.   Next I highlighted the roof shingles with a little gray.  I mixed a darker shade to give some contrast to the shingles.  Then the windows and trip also with gray.  Not too much.  




  And there you have it.  A New England type meeting house that goes together nicely, is fun to build and will look great on your table top.  Fir thise of you tgat woykd like more details "Things from the Basement" sells shingles for the roofs that will give great details and improve the model.  They also make furniture to fill your house if so desired.  but for me I am very happy with how the house turned out.  I am sure it will look great on my table.

Highly recommend!