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Miniatures Adventure => Interwar => Topic started by: Michi on 05 February 2010, 04:19:40 PM

Title: Tin can town
Post by: Michi on 05 February 2010, 04:19:40 PM
Accommodation for workers, miners, loggers, prospectors, soldiers, prisoners, wounded, refugees and everybody else in the first half of the 20th century:


(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale853-1.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale854-1.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale855-1.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale856-1.jpg)
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: AKULA on 05 February 2010, 04:22:51 PM
Are they scratch or prebuilt models Michi - the quality of your scratch builds is always so high, but these have a consistency that suggest resin moulds?

Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: revford on 05 February 2010, 04:35:32 PM
I really like these, a nice balance between uniform and grotty.  :)

What are the the secrets of their construction?
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Michi on 05 February 2010, 04:40:22 PM
Are they scratch or prebuilt models Michi

These are scratchbuilt from corrugated cardboard.

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale799-1.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale800-1.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale823.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale824.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale825.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale826.jpg)

(http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/ll111/wamasaka/Rome/MiniaturenfotosOriginale827.jpg)
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Arlequín on 05 February 2010, 04:58:20 PM
They really look the part and so many uses too...  :)
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: myincubliss on 05 February 2010, 05:52:26 PM
where did you get the doors and windows from?
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Cory on 05 February 2010, 06:31:34 PM
Inspiring and versatile, not to mention well done - thank you.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Supercollider on 05 February 2010, 06:45:52 PM
They've turned out nicely?  :o

Now I know what I'll be making at the weekend.  Thanks!
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Michi on 05 February 2010, 07:21:45 PM
where did you get the doors and windows from?

Scratchbuilt as well.
I made the shacks from corrugated cardboard, bases are 8x12cm, walls are 4x12/8x12cm, cut openings for windows and doors in, glued simple cardboard to the back, again cut openings in to make frames for windows and doors and glued another layer of card behind these to cut the quartered windows. Finally a transparent plastic sheet was glued behind these and there you are. I initially wanted to make field houses with angled roofs when I found that crafting cardboard my wife had bought some years ago... 

You need:
Cardboard
Steel ruler
Scalpel
Glue (I used UHU)
Transparent foil (old blisters)
Pins (these will make the door handles and are not attached yet)
Matches (if you want to raise the floors from the ground like I did)

Very cheap and quick, yet effective, I think.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Hawkeye on 05 February 2010, 08:16:07 PM
Nice, very nice. Well made, well painted, and hugely versatile. They'll be going into my ideas folder, no doubt about it!
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Dan on 06 February 2010, 03:59:59 AM
They look very good . How did you manage to curve the roofs without creasing the corrugations ? I'd love to do something similar for my Dads Army project but am still puzzled by this problem. :-[
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Michi on 06 February 2010, 01:03:11 PM
They look very good . How did you manage to curve the roofs without creasing the corrugations ? I'd love to do something similar for my Dads Army project but am still puzzled by this problem. :-[

Pull them over a sharp edge (the unseen side). I use my desk for that. The trick is to do it repeatedly and not to curve the sheet in one go. Practice a little with normal cardboard until you can handle it, otherwise you could ruin the precious modeling card. The principle is the same as for curving sheet metal - never bend too much at a time.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: DFlynSqrl on 06 February 2010, 01:08:51 PM
Those look great Michi.  So many uses!  A fantastic idea.

Thanks for the list of construction materials.  Seems like they are pretty light too.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: scotty on 06 February 2010, 08:12:05 PM
Those are excellent looking models. Would be extremely useful as barracks for my regulars and as a target for Red forces. May just have to follow your instructions and build some myself

scotty
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Dan on 07 February 2010, 08:50:22 AM
Pull them over a sharp edge (the unseen side). I use my desk for that. The trick is to do it repeatedly and not to curve the sheet in one go. Practice a little with normal cardboard until you can handle it, otherwise you could ruin the precious modeling card. The principle is the same as for curving sheet metal - never bend too much at a time.

Thanks , I didn't think the solution would be that simple. ::)
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Axtklinge on 15 March 2011, 11:54:51 AM
Scratchbuilt as well.

You need:
Cardboard
Steel ruler
Scalpel
Glue (I used UHU)
Transparent foil (old blisters)
Pins (these will make the door handles and are not attached yet)
Matches (if you want to raise the floors from the ground like I did)

Very cheap and quick, yet effective, I think.


Easy, cheap and inspirational!
Great job!
 :)
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Luddite on 20 March 2011, 08:53:35 PM
Very nice multi-purpose tin huts!

Sort of remind me of the old Nissen Huts (although not the same shape)...
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Sangennaru on 20 March 2011, 09:20:58 PM
wow! fast and effective!

i'm working at the moment with corrugated iron, i have to say that it is a quite good material!!!


only one suggestion: to avoid the damages on the cutting edges, cut the cardboard from the backside!
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: infelix on 20 March 2011, 09:51:02 PM
They look great. I definitely have to try to make some for myself.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Nighthawk on 03 May 2011, 11:10:27 PM
They do look great. Now where can I use them. Hmmm  :?
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: Traveler Man on 04 May 2011, 02:06:08 PM
Very nice work! Thanks for the tip on corrugated cardboard. It's something I have a problem with too.
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: former user on 04 May 2011, 06:37:47 PM
I would never want to disregard Your stunning opus
however, just as a suggestion
don't You think some patches of the green in variations (as appear on repainted portions with not exactly the same colour) would let them look more realistic?
they look very neat but also very uniform, like out of the factory
Title: Re: Tin can town
Post by: magokiron on 05 May 2011, 04:08:49 AM
MARVELOUS!

Good looking, Simple, elegant, cheap, and USEFUL.

Oh! and the window and door construction tips are perhaps the BEST AND SIMPLEST solution I've ever seen, wit ASTOUNDING results.

Thanks a lot for posting this inspirational ideas.

Best wishes.