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Monday, 19 February 2024

Salute 2024... DEMO GAME BOARD PART 4-

 




I spent quite a few weeks thinking about how I was going to approach the water on this board. I checked out several 'realistic ocean waves' tutorials, some good, some not so realistic. I decided against foil waves and tissue paper waves as I wanted the transparency to them. These techniques look great on a small-scale model railway layout but they're a bit fragile and not all that convincing in 28mm. I had already done the resin pour, knowing that I wanted that layer or translucency to create depth- although as it turned out I over-pigmented because the green came out too strong so it's not as translucent as I would have liked. I did see an interesting video making a big wave from resin, which intrigues me but which had the opposite problem, it looks too big unless I want all my models to get swamped. However I wondered if I could combine two effects, making a silicone wave bed and a foil one (to test both approaches) and casting clear resin into it. Not having any silicone to hand I started playing with No More Nails... 

When messing around with the No More Nails I found it was pretty easy to work it into convincing waves forms for the kind of rough, crashing water I wanted. No point doing water if it's not dynamic! Initially I thought I would do all my waves with this and then paint where he light would come through the wave bright turquoise like the land descending below the surface. On my test pieces though this wasn't very effective. The crests were good (though No More Nails sets kinda creamish, not ideal but ok for slightly scummy water) but the body of the wave didn't look right. On previous builds I have done big water effects with clear silicone, but I wanted to be able to add foam and spray which wouldn't stick to this. A couple of other videos lead me to Fix All Crystal Clear which I could easily pick up from Screwfix. I did a couple of tests and instantly decided this was what I was going to use. It's quite blue tinted, which would piss me off if I had bought it for DIY purposes, but works perfectly for adding the layer of translucency I wanted from the resin.


Most people using this acrylic polymer product are cutting it with Isopropyl Alcohol which gives a kind of jelly substance that can be spread. That's ok for a leisurely flowing river. I kept mine neat because I wanted to lay it on thick and pull it around with a coffee stirrer, using the viscosity to make big ocean wave forms. It dries pretty fast so I could lay down a good bed, work it into small crests, then build big waves over the top after waiting ten minutes or so for it to harden. Initially I was laying it in quite fine ribbons across the direction I wanted the waves travelling, blending these together with a swirling motion. I soon found that this was producing quite a delicate rippling effect, not the dynamic peaks and troughs I wanted so I cut the nozzle right back to lay down big thick sausages. In hindsight before I did this I should have done the area up against the beach with the finer nozzle to create more delicate lapping, but I wasn't sure if I was going to have enough and wanted to prioritise doing the small bard as a test and then the demo board. As it turned out I had almost exactly the right amount, a bit left over.


Once it was set I used a blue ink to wash into the big furrows and under he big waves, adding more depth. This made the acrylic polymer quite dull, previously it was super-glossy. I went over these areas with Liquitex Heavy Gloss medium to bring back the shine and found that it set the Fix All much firmer. Not quite solid but definitely less spongey. I went back and covered all the water with the gloss medium. This added some extra small ripples and firmed everything up.


The Fix All allowed me to build quite tall waves in three or four passes. I may have got a bit carried away and forgotten that less is more... but DYNAMISM! This wave above I tried to copy as close as I could from a photo of water crashing into a similar cave mouth. The white crests I made with No More Nails which bonds just fine to the acrylic polymer and can itself be built up quite heavily if desired. I applied this with a coffee stirrer though as I felt the gun was a bit overkill.


I added a little bit of foam on top of the crests with dabs of No More Nails, but only on the bigger crests. Since it goes quite yellow when it sets I want to do most of the frothy wave tops with white acrylic paint. I did also go around the board at this point and put in where the waves would reach with the gloss heavy gel to make them look wet and slippery. I realised afterwards what I should have done was to paint this area darker where the water would soak into the rock itself. Might have to go back later and do that.


The foamy, frothy tops of the crashing waves was made from Woodland Scenics flake snow mixed into clear resin (very heavily, mix a lot in!). This was really easy to paste on in big, dramatic clumps using a coffee stirrer or lolly stick... so I went massively overboard and overdid it again. Didn't want to waste any! Ah well, fantasy innit. For future reference, less is definitely more! That being said, the big sprays coming crashing up through the gaps in the columns is definitely atmospheric and fun.


Here are some of the biggest waves with their foamy, crashy crests. The translucency of the Fix All really makes the wave look convincing. Once I had pasted the foam in place I lightly sprinkled over the top with neat Woodland Scenics snow. I thought this would make it look a bit more granular and whiter but I don't actually think it added anything. If anything I actually think it looks less like froth, but not enough that I'll scrape it off and do it again.


Because the breakers on the beach were more pronounced than I had hoped I decided to add a big wave to explain them. Actually, if this is the same body of water that is being pummelled onto the basalt columns it doesn't make sense for it to be gently idling up the beach, so that works ok. The mega wave was built up in the same way as on the Salute board but this time I did it in 4 stages, blending each one into the last, so I could make it curve up and actually roll over with a channel underneath. The neat Fix All hardly sags at all when pulled into place so it wasn't to difficult to coax it all the way over without collapsing. I put another big splash of foam in where it's crashing down.


I went in with some white acrylic and painted in the foamy bits around the edges of the rocks. I did also finally get around to using a sepia ink to 'wet' the stone where the waves are crashing. Just need to go over it with a varnish and put the glisten back. 


So here are some shots of the board pretty much finished. If you'd like a more 3-dimensional view you can check out the video coming soon to my YouTube Channel and, of course come along to Salute or join us for The Woods In The Woods games day this year. Details to be announced soon.










4 comments:

  1. really nice ^_^ I can see the Red bull isn't doing his job at keeping them unicorns in the sea

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  2. Wow, this board is beyond my wildest expectations, it's a true masterpiece, I love how it all looks!

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    1. The thing that now bugs me looking at the aerial view is that it's quite rectangular. I think it would have looked better with the big rock on a dynamic diagonal... something for the next one! :D

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  3. Massive amount of work here Geoff! Looks good sir. enjoy Saluting!!

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