- Well as is obvious by the post title I have myself a Warhound Titan from Forge World. I bought it in the first half of 2012 and while I did a bit of cleanup work on it over the rest of the year, over Christmas I felt inspired to get the project going full swing. The very positive response I got to my developing advanced painting skills also gave me the confidence I need to feel that I can do a decent job of painting the Warhound, which is an epic task.
Between Christmas and now I got sidetracked with some other projects, including The Fiddler Mech, but the Warhound is now my number one project.
Cleanup and assembly has been a big job. All of the joints have been pinned and I'm using Zap A Gap 5 minute epoxy for any important joins. The model is highly detailed, including a complete interior, however I decided early on that I wouldn't bother with the interior for 3 reasons:- It's intended to be a static display model in a case so nobody will be looking inside
- Getting the body to assemble properly so that the internal parts all line up nicely is a pain
- Painting the interiors would add a lot of time to painting
One thing I did want to do was something interesting for the grille that covers the cooling systems on the top of the carapace armour. I played around in Inkscape and came up with what I felt was a suitably 40k style design. 10 minutes with my CNC router and some really thin styrene sheet produced this:
It was on the right path but the skull cutout just wasn't right. After some more playing around I worked out the perfect design:
All of the pre-painting assembly done:
I'm building an intricate diorama base for the Warhound, inspired by the building modelling work featured on a recent Eye of Error blog post (seriously that is one of the best Imperial building ruins I've seen anywhere). So I'll have the Warhound marching around the corner of a city block. I've picked up one of the one of the Pegasus Hobbies Gothic building sets as the main building and I'll be adding suitable details from CoD kits (and stuff I machine up on my router).
The base is made from a sheet of 8mm perspex. It's far more rigid than I had expected and guaranteed to never warp!
I decided that the roads of the GrimDark future will still be asphalt, and hence would get pretty torn up by things like Titans traipsing over them. I remembered a cool technique I had read about some time back that a guy used on a 1/35 modern military diorama (link):- Place a thin layer of foam that is fairly compressible. About 5mm thick. Florist's foam seems to be most appropriate.
- Apply a thin coat of the asphalt mix on top and smooth it out.
- Wait for the asphalt to cure (24 hours?)
- Make depressions in the asphalt using the Titan itself for the footprints and by hand for potholes and the like.
Fast forward quite a few weeks with a lack of WIP pictures. Last weekend I did some major work on the base. All of the plaster work is done (I'm using Hydrocal tinted with a little black paint) and just waiting to be smoothed using a scraper and sandpaper. Once that's done I can then scribe lines for the joins and cracks. I'm using the same technique I used on my Fiddler base, which I was very pleased with.
Two things I felt were necessary for the road and guttering were a stormwater drain and a sewer manhole cover. More Inkscape and CNC work have facilitated some pieces I'm really pleased with, although I forgot to take a pic of the man hole cover. The drain grate looks fantastic though:
I've also been making progress painting the titan itself (airbrushing it in Warp Runners colours - blue with a yellow head), but don't have any pics to show. Hopefully this weekend I'll get a chance to smooth out the plaster work on the base and then do the asphalt. And maybe even do some more airbrushing...
Stay tuned!
- Well as is obvious by the post title I have myself a Warhound Titan from Forge World. I bought it in the first half of 2012 and while I did a bit of cleanup work on it over the rest of the year, over Christmas I felt inspired to get the project going full swing. The very positive response I got to my developing advanced painting skills also gave me the confidence I need to feel that I can do a decent job of painting the Warhound, which is an epic task.