Archive for the ‘Editorial’ Category

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Future plans

May 13, 2009

Every miniature gamer dreams of a beautiful gaming board. Yes, even the ones saying that  piles of books covered with cloth and sand will do. A good, permanent table with no corner cutting in its construction. With none of the mishmash collection of chunks of cardboard and insulation foam and soda cans that we use as proxy terrain, but instead all those expensive but beautiful resin pieces, plastic and cork buildings (for the latter, check out Matakishi’s teahouse) and terrain painted and flocked in a uniform style. Anyone who’s ever wargamed will know what I mean.

As a kid I used to look at model railway setups and doll houses, and was fascinated by the intricate detail. You had climbers on mountain sides, people running to catch a train and tiny vegetables on tiny plates with tiny utensils to eat them with. I absolutely wanted to build something like that, but when you’re twelve you’re on a pretty tight budget. Skip forward 15 years, and I’m still on a pretty tight budget but with a lot more determination and vision. And thus was born my Suburbia project.

Suburbia will be a detailed gaming board depicting a small modern town, to be ravaged by zombies, vampires, werewolves, supervillains, aliens and all sorts of other nasty critters I can think of. It will be composed of O scale plastic model railway buildings (especially Plasticville) and resin accessories from companies such as Armorcast and Ainsty. While this will set me back quite a few euros, it will hopefully also provide me with motivation to get the thing finished. And while I’m doing this, I want to add a whole lot of small detail: crows on the cemetery’s tombstones (a shamelessly ripped idea, thanks Sho3box!), a small altar in the church, small critters running around town, trash in alleys..you name it! As a matter of fact name it, all ideas are more than welcome.

As for inspiration, I have a few sites from which to draw with the main players being the insanely cool Zombie Town! and the almost equally cool Combat Zone Chronicles. I have to admit that I won’t be going as far as ZT! in the interior detailing. I mean, I still want to finish the project in the forseeable future.

The board will probably be built on a fairly large sheet of 2cm thick MDF. I’m thinking of using magnetic receptive paint and small sheet magnets to help keep things like street furniture in place. I will paint a street grid on the table, with each terrain piece – be it a building, a park or whatever – mounted on a separate piece of plasticard that neatly fits the grid. This should provide me with a setup that’s easily modified and solid enough not to go flying around every time someone bumps the table.

I will post regular updates once the project starts. At the moment I’m still designing the whole thing, and waiting for the 7 Plasticville buildings that I got for cheap off eBay. Do I really need to say I’m really excited about this whole thing?

On the topic of populating my new town, I’m also running out of zombies to paint. As I can’t seem to decide whether to buy new ones from Studio Miniatures, Griffin Miniatures or King Zombie, I’m settling on a compromise of getting them all. Sweetness.

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About Dawn of the Lead

April 25, 2009

I’ve wanted to start a blog for quite a while. Of course I have my trusty Livejournal, where I whine to friends about my personal life, but I wanted to do something completely different. Dawn of the Lead will – as the name suggests – deal with two of my favourite things: miniatures and zombies. Most of the posts will revolve around these two, and occasionally both as I get my hands on some zombie miniatures.

Why zombies and miniatures? Nothing deep here. In all honesty, they’re both excellent, and I couldn’t just pick one. Besides, I probably couldn’t create enough content from just one of those. Come to think of it, I have a feeling that even these two won’t be enough for regular updates, but I’m still hopeful!

In the last five-six years I’ve developed something of an addiction to zombie culture in the form of movies, games and books. I’ve occasionally (on the bus today, to be honest) wondered about this. What makes zombies so interesting to me? There’s none of the romantic fantasy associated with vampires and the like, not a lot of Lovecraftian cosmic horror, no deep and exciting mythology to explore, just an endless horde of flesh hungry undead.

Then it came to me.

I’ve always been fascinated (in a very sane, rational and normal sense) by catastrophes, what-if fantasies, tales of desperate struggle and the end of the world. The sinking of Titanic, alternative history, Helm’s deep, Alamo, Chernobyl,  The Book of Revelation, global epidemics, thermonuclear war…you name it. The zombie genre combines all of this. Simple as that.

And miniatures? Thanks to my two older brothers, I’ve been playing roleplaying games since I was six years old. They used to paint the occasional miniature for our D&D games, and I’d always play with the miniatures when they weren’t in rpg use. Still, the miniatures were forgotten for years while the roleplaying continued. Then, around age 14 a friend introduced me to something called Warhammer Fantasy Battle. Being young and naive I was quickly hooked on miniatures. Now, 12 years later, I still occasionally play WHFB although the ratio between painting/modeling and gaming has tipped heavily in favor of the former. I also have a couple of hundred painted miniatures, and at least twice as many waiting to be painted. And I still keep buying them much much faster than I paint.

I consider myself an OK painter. While I lack the patience to truly master the art, I produce models that I’m happy with. I started my painting following Mike McVey’s Games Workshop tutorials, and to this day I always paint even those areas on a miniature that won’t be seen. Did I mention that I have a lot of miniatures waiting to be painted? Maybe one day I’ll explode with frustration and dip and drybrush my entire backlog, but until that day I’m treating most of the models that I paint as individual works of casual art and craftsmanship.

This blog will deal with these two subjects and their outskirts as the mood strikes me. Reports and reviews of movies seen and books read, painting ideas and finished work, general frothing over some new soon-to-be-dead modeling projects and basically whatever I feel like sharing with teh Internets. I hope it provides inspiration, information and maybe a touch of entertainment.

Welcome!