Painting Legion of Everblight: The very beginning

My workspace

As I’ve written about before I have quite a few tabletop war game miniatures. I’ve also mentioned how I needed a plan, motivation, or some sort of painting group in order to get through all the models I have lying in boxes and cases. Ask the Universe and it gives back they say… Not too long ago two of my friends, independent of each other, started holding group painting sessions! I used one of those opportunities to finish my Battlefleet Gothic Necron fleet and just today I went to another one to start painting my Horde Legion of Everblight models. I’ve been putting off painting these models for well, years now, because they’re mostly flesh and flesh is notoriously difficult to paint. Give me armor any day and I’ll happily slap the paint around. It’s very difficult to mess up painting leather or metal. Flesh though? That’s hard and I was scared. Scared because I don’t know how to paint it and scared because the pros who do make it look so good.

Six hours of work

Thankfully my friend is not only an experienced painter but well versed in various flesh painting techniques. I spent six hours today at a table next to him as he guided me through how to add paint flesh that looked vibrant and had depth. Basically, it all comes down to lots of layering and selective use of washes. I added the base layer and two additional layers to all four of them and then concentrated on a single model for the rest of the time in order to learn as much technique as possible; so that in the future I could complete the rest of the models at home. The final model, which took the lion share of time, has nine layers of paint, four washes and used a total of seven different colors in various blends on it. Oh, and it still isn’t complete! The mouth, including teeth, all still needs to be painted, washed, and highlighted. I’m hoping I get faster as I go along.

Base coat, and two layers of paint. You can see the beginnings of the shading here
Five+ layers of paint, includes highlights and two washes.
All done except for the mouth!
From the other side

Once the mouth is painted the only thing left to do would be to paint and flock (fake rocks and grass) the models base and I’ll be done. This wasn’t easy to do and I’m not completely happy with the results my progress throughout the day really improved. I’m hoping by the time I get to the really big models I’ll have the technique down and can turn out a really great looking model. Of course, if I do I’ll tell you about it here.

Letters from White Chapel: Not a Review

The London Police search desperately for a killer...

While I received Letters from White Chapel some time back I didn’t break open the box, sit down, and play the game until quite recently. I had over the friends that had gifted me the game and sitting around the table we figured the game out. The game is set in Victorian England between August 31, to November 9, 1888 with one player acting as Jack the Ripper and the other players, up to five, playing the police investigators tasked with hunting the serial killer down.

The game is played over five “nights” each broken down into two phases. The first phase, termed “hell”, lets the person playing as Jack the Ripper place his various victims on the board with a number of decoys. Then, the other players place their investigators around the town, again with decoys. Then the victim tokens are flipped over, decoys removed, and victim pawns put on the board (the victims are termed “the wretched in the game’s documentation. I found that apt.) Now the second phase of the night is entered where “Jack” make take a victim or wait, if “Jake” waits the investigators move each victim pawn one space and then “Jack” may turn over an investigator token; if it is a decoy the token is removed if it is an investigator the appropriately colored pawn piece is place on the board. This process repeats until “Jack” decides to take a victim, up to five times on the fifth turn “Jack” must declare a victim. He declares the kill, places a scene of the crime token on the location of the murder and the hunt begins. The Jack player now must move through the streets of White Chapel avoiding the investigators and returning to his hideout (picked at the beginning of the game and written down on a tracking sheet (all of Jack’s moves are a secret to the investigators and are kept track of on a sheet that the “Jack” player maintains.))

The scene of the crime and three investigators...

The investigator players are tasked with working together to trap Jack or prevent him from getting to his hideout. Each investigator can move during their turn and either search for clues or make an arrest. Searching for clues reveals to the investigators whether any places adjacent to them have been traveled through by Jack. Making an arrest will win the game for the investigators if the adjacent place they declare the arrest in contains Jack. Jack has two limited special moves at his disposal during the hunt: he can move two spaces in a turn or jump over a block. If Jack is arrested or fails to make it back to his hideout in a specified number of moves the investigators win. If Jack makes it the night ends and the next night begins; if Jack makes it to his hideout on the fifth night that player wins.

White Chapel

Turns out this game is really easy for Jake to win! The game definitely is improved by the Jake player being risky in the flight back to their hideout. A cautious, crafty Jack player using their special moves can make it back to the hideout each night without a single investigator finding a single clue! Even once a clue or clues have been found the branching pathway system makes it difficult if not impossible to determine which direction Jack might have gone… The game definitely improves once investigators get a few clues and can start coordinating their moves in an attempt to box Jack in.  Of course, even then it still takes some luck, in one game investigators twice found themselves standing next to the killer but had searched for clues instead of making an arrest allowing Jack to escape!

I, and the friends I played with, found the game a lot of fun to play! Especially once we instituted the house rule that Jack must be daring in his flight from justice. Trying to deduce which way Jack might have gone and correlate the investigators moved accordingly is satisfying, even more so when your hunch is right and you find yourself closing in on the killer, or the location of his hideout! It doesn’t hurt that the game can be played in under two hours either!

How My Garden Grows: Summer 2011

To be honest it's kind of out of control

Despite the unusually moderate weather summer is in full swing and as you can see from the picture above so is the garden! The wall of greenery you see in the background are my cucumbers scaling the 6 foot yard fence. Everything is beginning to produce with the zucchinis and tomatoes being harvested daily. D and I are looking into canning and pickling recipes to handle all of them.

A zucchini blossom
Eggplant blossoms

Eggplants are the only thing we haven’t harvested yet. The poor plants have had to fight with giant tomato plants on one side and aggressive beans on the other and haven’t done as well as I’d hoped.

Eggplants are starting to show up, though

Despite how aggressively the beans are growing they aren’t producing very meany beans though. Only a handful every other day or so. Not enough to do anything with but throw in salads or eat as a snack.

These blooms better be beans soon
Cucumbers and beans climbing up the trellis
A tiny cucumber and blossom
Fried green tomatoes, anyone?
This was the complete haul for last Saturday

The harvest for last Saturday was 11 tomatoes, seven bean pods, two zucchinis, and a cucumber. The cucumber, tomatoes, and zucchinis we all be going into a bread salad that I’ll be enjoying tonight!

Parents stopped by. Dropped off one of my old hobbies/talents…

The last time I touched any of this stuff was more than a decade ago...

My parents came through Fourth of July weekend on the way up to Wyoming for their summer vacation. They brought up with them the last of my belongings that were at my childhood home. It was mostly art supplies. I don’t consider myself that creative and I certainly don’t think I have much talent. But, in my family I was always the creative one, the one with the wild ideas and the ability to convey those ideas through word or image. I took art classes through middle and high school and might have taken a quarter of figure drawing at one point in community college. Since then? I haven’t done any sort of creative work outside of the occasional writing and photography.

pencils, inks, erasers, etc...

Sadly, the one thing that my parents forgot was my old portfolio that has all the work I did in high school/college in it. That is still sitting in a closet somewhere in the desert. At least it isn’t outside where the extreme weathers would surely ruin the paper, chalks, oils, etc…

Black and white crayons, brushes, calligraphy pen, ink...

I don’t why I didn’t pursue art further. I had time in college to take classes. I must have thought that it wasn’t worth the time to practice at something I never considered myself very good at and so couldn’t do anything with later on in life. Yes, I realize how stupid that sounds coming from someone who got their BA in Classical Civilizations. I think another reason might be that I never had any interest in pursuing the craft through digital means… I like getting my hands dirty and feeling the paper beneath my fingers; and my parents didn’t have the money or processing power (this was the mid/late 90s) to get a drawing tablet or the software then in use. So, I sunk my time into other things: poetry and photography. I miss it sometimes. Now that I have all this stuff just sitting around maybe I’ll pick it up again… Who knows?

More pencils and graphites. Those might be water colors on the right?
This is a surprising amount of spray paints and sealers...

If you would like to see some of my old creative work and new stuff as well you can check out my other blog: Fictive Funk. I’ll be posting up old sketches all this week and next!

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