I do however wish to show the separate bits I've made to bulking the inside of the park.
It was difficult deciding what to include (flower beds, fountains, general greenery all came to mind, but my initial thoughts were for a children's play area. I opted for just three items to be included, a swing-set, a slide and a see-saw. I thought these would be fairly easy to make out of scrap and were typical of a play area.
The slide is entirely made from thin card but has a core of polystyrene in the solid support.
I went for a solid stairs end mainly for ease, similarly with the support rails for what really should have been typically been iron stairs (or similar).
I did miss out on a trick that I only thought about afterwards in that at the top of the slide I should have built some form of platform, this would have enabled me to have placed a figure at the top. The slide's current width of about 20mm really prevents this.
The second piece of equipment is a see-saw, made from various bits of scrap plastic; the central cross-beam is a bit of sprue, suitably filed down.
This was another one of those models that I'd started and wished I really hadn't. It's so small and fiddly to make it look right.
The base itself is not a single piece of scrap, but two pieces glued to the central upright for added strength.
The final bit of equipment is the swings set.
The frame of this is again two bits of identical right-angled sprue glued at what looked by eye to be an appropriate angle.
I had enough space between the angles to get two actual swings in the gap without it looking complete pants.
The slide was given a wash of filler over the rear steps before painting started.
The pale green slide, turned into the garish yellow and green slide before I opted for the red and blue slide you seen here.
As in all my models the bright cheerful colours I had settled on were then abused with washes and splashes of various browns to represent the wear and tear of neglect on a rusting playground.
The see-saw had two holes drilled into the upright pieces and paper clip handles, cut to size, glued into them.
Again the yellow and red turned to blue and red and was suitably "weathered".
I'd decided that the base would be painted to represent a dull concrete for contrast, rather than a rusting metal plate.
The chain is from a cheap bit of jewellery, kindly donated by SWMBO (knowingly, if you were wondering) and the seats are more sprue.
I think I probably spent more time putting the chains and seats on this than I did making all of the above. The chains were eventually superglued into stiff lengths (thus it's not a working model).
Once more weathering was applied to the blue uprights (its original intended colour).
Once more that's all for this week. Next week's blog will show the elements that finish off the Park's internal bits, featuring, once more, the use of coffee stirrers (just for Clint ).
As always your comments are both welcomed and appreciated.
Looking good, as usual...I'll stop saying that now as I keep repeating myself.
ReplyDeleteI feel the need to mention I had this great idea of making a park and then painting hasslefrees kids survivors (and grandma as their guardian) and studio miniature's kids zombies so they could do some bashing, but atm, if we were competing, you'd be a park ahead!
I can only imagine how many dreams were shattered working on the see saw and the swings. The gravity and fiddly bits always kill the cool images of a finished pieces I make in my head before I start working on them!
Thanks Mathyoo, you're right about dreams. My best efforts are those that I've though over for a good while. The finished park I'm sure will make a good centrepiece for a fight.
DeleteNice work again Joe,
ReplyDeleteI did try a while back to make a swing set pretty similar. Exact sprue frame, some twisted wire for the chain and a bit of a (your favourite) coffee stirrer for the seats. Gave up after many failed attempts to glue the damn thing together! I'll have to try again as it obviously can be done!
Thanks Dave, it was nearly going to be the broken swing with the bits on the ground. I really should have gone with solid swing arms as they'd have been much easier and not completely unknown.
DeleteI don't think it matters too much that the swings and the see-saw don't work. they're only meant to be scenery and in that they serve their purpose. They look good and it just goes to show what can be done with scraps and a lot of imagination.
ReplyDeleteI'm in total agreement, but I think the first thing that people will want to do is see if the swings swing !
DeleteLooking great. Wish I had the patience.
ReplyDeleteThanks Colin, I've got time rather than patience.
DeleteVery cool scratch building indeed, although my mind boggles at the patience involved! The weathering on the frames really brings them to life and gives a grimy realism that a zombified play ground encounter deserves. Perhaps some tags and dog poop could enhance the bleakness :) Inspirational stuff!
ReplyDeleteThanks HH, I've tried tagging on my construction site, with a larger "canvas", but these are a bit too small for me.
DeleteVery nice stuff, the slide is fantastic, well done mate
ReplyDeleteThanks SK, but fantastic is a bit ott for a bit of cardboard.
DeleteI do like the weathered appearance - very effective at making these items look a bit abused and unloved!
ReplyDeleteThanks C6, they do have tp look the part after the apocalypse too.
DeleteNice work. The swing set is definitely my favourite! Its inspiring to see some one put so much love into an project like this!
ReplyDeleteThanks you so much David, to be told I'm inspiring is very humbling as i jave never set out to be so. I don't think there were many words of love said though when I made the swings (also my favourite)
DeleteLove the weathering, good job, these look great. Some playes may poke the swings... tell them not to before a game :)
ReplyDeleteThanks ZA, yep I can think that pushing the swings to see if they work would spring to most players minds, just like rotating a tanks turret, to see if it does.
DeleteI like these a lot. Well executed.
ReplyDeleteThanks Sean, much appreciated.
DeleteThis is damn fine work Joe. You should be proud of it all - justifiably so.
ReplyDeleteThanks Colin, I'm rarely proud of my stuff, but I'm always pleased to see it finished.
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