Thanks so much for the glue suggestions. My second boatbuilding project is on hold, and this last week I've been finishing my third half-timbered house, the second kitbashed from a Tabletop Basement kit. It's almost finished, but I couldn't wait any longer to share photos.
These Tabletop Basement resin kits are a pain to prepare, since the casting quality on the backs leaves a lot to be desired. But once prepared, they do a nice job, even if their layout is very standard. My kitbashing efforts included shortening the ground floor lateral walls to create an overhang on the front (as many half-timbered houses have), to make the door openable and, of course, to do a fully detailed interior. I'm particularly happy with the way the furniture turned out. But first, some pics of the whole building.
Here is the front facade, you can't really see the overhang from this angle, but IMHO it really improved the look of the house. The door is slightly ajar (held in place by pins set in the the floor and door jamb). The roof still needs some work, maybe some moss and lichen.
Here's the back, with a lot of climbing ivy, a balsa doorway to the basement on an angled base I textured from dense foam, with help from a stone-patterned roller from GreenStuff World. Can't see much of it, but these texture rollers do a wonderful job on foam. There's also a chopping stump and a scratchbuilt shed protecting a woodpile (short bits of branches quartered with a chisel, of all things). And when you lift off the roof...
I added a plank floor (balsa) for the attic, including a removable hatch. I don't think the beds are really appropriate for this dark attic, but I just had to show them off.
The bed is carved balsa (carved to shape after roughing up with a wire brush) and the sheets, covers and pillows are from a kleenex, cut to shape, then drenched in a mixture of craft paint and PVA. Took a whole day to dry!
Removing the plank attic floor, you can see the upper floor with another bed (made a batch of three!), as well as a balsa table, benches and chairs. Not so happy with the clairs, but they'll do. From the other side:
You can see the foam fireplace from previous pics. Still haven't tarted up the fireplace with logs and a fire, unlike the ground floor...
This is the part I'm really proud of. The foam-carved fireplace has a burning pile of logs, a stack of wood (from tree branches) and a wizard's desk, complete with candle (the melted wax is from a blob of gel superglue) an inkwell (sculpted from a barbecue skewer) a couple open books (the writing is from a fine-tipped pen) and a pen (sculpted from a toothpick) and some more books held by balsa bookends (books cut from medium cardstock - bank calendars). Above the desk you can see a shelf with more books and some potion bottles, as well as a mysterious gold-bound box. From the other side...
You can see the bookcase (built from balsa) filled with books that took me ages to prepare and paint. Before cutting the individual books from a strip of cardstock, I sanded one edge roundish, for the binding, cut them to size, glued together groups of 4-6 books, and then painted them. Left a few books solo, so as to leave them flat or leaning against the piles. And the sharp-eyed will see a skull from the GW box of skulls I picked up. So handy, when you need a skull!
This is my fourth building in the village project I started last spring. There's one kitbashed GW/Citadel Laketown house, one scratchbuilt half-timbered house and now two kitbashed Tabletown Basement houses, all with playable interiors. Once
my Pathfinder players get off this (not entirely) deserted island, I should be ready for some village intrigue games. The preparation time is huge, but I'm having fun, and I get to show off my work here.