Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => Pulp => Topic started by: Argonor on 04 July 2006, 08:38:40 AM
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Hi, everybody, and congratulations, Alex, on your forum! I have been following BOBT for a while, as I have been plannning (and collecting/buying miniatures for) a pulp-era Rugged Adventures table-top campaign starting in Egypt from the beginning of this spring. Always good motivation/inspiration to see beautifully painted miniatures!
Now my question: I've been drooling over the buildings shown in many of the photos, especially the middle-eastern ones in issue 14; are they scratch built, or can they be purchased from somewhere?
Btw.: If anybody should wonder: I'm a 'mature' gamer, if such a thing exists :wink: , having just turned 40 last February and living with my wife and two little daughters of 3 ys and 3 ms respectively. I have been gaming for almost 30 years, but have only recently given in to the temptation of the pulp and (perhaps) victorian era(s) - this website didn't do anything to help me resist, I must say... :)
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Welcome, argonor and many thanks for the kind words! The adobe buildings are from Hovels, really good stuff, unlimited recommendation. And be sure, also in the future this site will don't anything to help you resist :mrgreen:
Alex
P.S: also two daugthers? Like me, no boys to play with :-)
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incidentally, Monolith has loads of adobe buildings too. Looks nice, I have to order some
http://www.monolithdesigns.co.uk/adobe25m.htm
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Hi Argonor and welcome,
when youre living in Denmark this information is probably from interest for you.
We are presenting a small convention in Bad Oldesloe ( Schleswig Holstein - Northern Germany in September. It will be held on two days on the 9th and 10th September. The location is a youth hostel. Pulp is the main event. There will be Chaos of Cairo, Gothic Horror Vampire Wars and .45 Adventure. Plus other games like a Napoleonic, Confrontation, Flames of War, Hordes and Warmachine, Rezolution. For further information please contact Burkhard Hannig. hannig.bu@cityweb.de
Cheers
Björn
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Thanks for the links, I'll be looking at the sites as soon as I get home form work (I'm having lunch break right now, and we have about 30 degrees C).
The convention in Bad Oldesloe sounds interesting - I must see if I can get away from the family for a day or two.
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I couldn't resist looking at the terrain sites, and wow... my bank consultant will be chasing me around this summer :lol:
Now I only have to find a manufacturer of 25/28 mm chinese structures (and a hiddren temple treasure, I think I have a map here somewhere... (disappears in the ruins muttering and cackling to himself))
No, seriously, having been a regular visitor to the pulpfigures website, and the Ainsty catalogue, I am still looking for those 'native' shacks of China Station to appear ready-made for clumsy, many-thumbed non-modellers like myself. Does anyone know anything?
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I couldn't resist looking at the terrain sites, and wow... my bank consultant will be chasing me around this summer :lol:
Now I only have to find a manufacturer of 25/28 mm chinese structures ?
Also Monolith :)
http://www.monolithdesigns.co.uk/china.htm
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have anybody Pict´s f the Monolith chinese buildings i mean more than the poor pict´s from the webside ?
why have so manny company so sparsely pictures of the stuff thay sell ?
aren't they interesting in my monny ?
Grimm
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The Chinese buildings at the Pulp Figures site are Bob's own work - and very nice indeed.
I make model scenery for a living, but it took me a long time before I was willing to try Chinese buildings - it's the distinctive 'curly' roofs that are hard to do. Eventually I cracked it. I use standardised templates of thin card to draw matching 'ribs' of foamcore for the roof, then hot glue sheets of corrugated card into the shape desired.
If you can make basic foamcore or card buildings (and Arab buildings are dead easy - they are just boxes) with a little practice you can make Chinese buildings.
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Hey, why didn't I see that entry in their catalogue in the first place??? Must be the hot, humid weather of tropical Funen.... Again today the temperature rises to about 30 degrees C, and I am dreaming mysekf away to white beaches and palm trees (just got some nice plastic ones from Pegasus, btw.).
Thanks again!
To Howard Whitehouse: Aren't you the author of a rules set by the name of Astounding Tales or something...? (i have been sniffing around for it because of a recommendation of it in some of the Rugged Adventures material)
And a question on foamcore: Is there a webstore in the UK or elsewhere in Europe that carries foamcore in different thicknesses? In Denmark I have been able to find a single store carrying only 10 mm. In Aarhus, about 200 km from where I live...
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Argonor, I am, indeed, the guilty party behind the madness that is 'Astounding Tales!'
Foamcore is very easy to find in N. America - every office supplies store, art store or the better craft shops carry it on the racks with the sheets of art paper. Are you certain we aren't having one of those 'Oh, we call that ----- here!' moments? Modellers get that all the time: Britons call white glue 'PVA', Americans call it 'Elmer's Glue' after the leading brand.
Foamcore is simply thin plastic foam (maybe 5mm thick) with a sheet of paper on either side, like a sandwich. You may well have it in Denmark, and just call it something else --- H
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Is foamcore = polystyrol?
http://www.architekturbedarf.de/Shop/Modellbau1/Kunststoff/Polystyrol/polystyrol.html
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No, not exactly
IMHO it's more like foamcore = Sandwichplatte
http://www.architekturbedarf.de/Shop/Modellbau1/Pappe/FBoard/fboard.html
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Yes, that looks like it. It's pretty cheap, cuts with a sharp modelling knife (although it dulls blades quickly), and can be glued with the sort of adhesives you use on paper.
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Oisin: You have hit the mark, I may be ordering some from that store until I find a place in Denmark that carries it ('Oisin' is from the Irish/Celtic tradition, right?)
Howard Whitehouse:
1) I do have a few 'Danish' translations for the stuff like: 'skumpap', 'arkitektpap' og 'sandwichpap' - 'pap' meaning 'cardboard' in Danish, but it's hard to come by. Maybe I should try an architect supply store or something like that...
2) Do you know a place, where I can buy a copy of Astounding Tales?
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2) Do you know a place, where I can buy a copy of Astounding Tales?
Astounding Tales will be available from http://thevirtualarmchairgeneral.com in a few weeks.
Rich
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@argonor: That's right. Oisín was the son of the irish hero Fionn Mac Cumhaill, member of the fianna warriors. I think he was some kind of bard.
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Do you have a local office supply store? Go there and lok to see what they offer for the sorts of temporary displays, notice boards etc that business use when they want something cheap and disposable. There must be a Danish equivalent!
See my other notice about the new edition of 'Astounding Tales!' H
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Howard: Thanks. I just managed to get on the subscribtion list, and now I'm looking forward to read the AT rules :)
Oisin: Yep, I thought so; wasn't he also the guy who spent some time in Tir n'an Og and returned to Ireland just to fall over dead as he sat foot on the coast (there's somewhat Shang-ri-lah'ish there... hmmm..)? It's been quite a while since I last read some Irish myths. And now I'll stop ranting about this out-of-topic subject.... just can't help it, Celtic myth, music and tradition has been a favourite of mine for many years.
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It's shocking to find out that Romania actually has something which is hard to find in the West, when modelling is concerned. Yet in Bucharest I managed to find about a dozen places where you can buy foam core at decent prices (about 2 Euros for a 50x70 cm piece).
You should try near universities that have an architecture section, it is widely used by architecture students.
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Thanks!
Actually, lots of stuff is hard to come by in Denmark - I guess it's due to the small size of the country; whole-sale dealers seem to think that it's not worth the effort to start importing goods, if they do not expect a lot of stores to buy it... Then, if you ask in a store, they've hever heard about it, and as they haven't got a clue what you're talking about, they are not that eager to use time and effort checking the availability...
The funny thing is - our (only, I think) architect school is also situated in Århus, if I'm remembering right... Coincidence? Not, methinks.
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Americans use foamcore because they don't have access to cork like we Europeans do :)
http://www.matakishi.com/makingthings.htm
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Americans use foamcore because they don't have access to cork like we Europeans do :)
http://www.matakishi.com/makingthings.htm
:o :o :o WOW!!! dear matakishi, i'm very impressed. Tomorrow i'm going to buy cork :-)
and welcome aboard :)
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welcome abaord matakishi. I look forward to more of your items being posted here.
BTW, thanks for doing that Prehistoric Settlement write-up. It has definatly gottne me to pull my old items out.
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I always thought cork isn't good for buildings because of its porous surface... have you sealed the cork plates or came they that smooth?
By the way, matakishi, those computer-mouse anti-grav cars are brilliant! :D
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Thanks, I've been lurking since the beginning 8)
I use untreated flooring cork, 3.2mm thick. It has a smooth side and a slightly rough side and isn't porous.
The inner city and WWII articles have the full setails at the start.
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Matakishi, I'm looking through your site and I love it, lots of nice stuff and i havent seen all of them. Topnotch!
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:)
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Matakishi - love your city buildings! You make it look so easy!
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Found this at:
http://www.pardulon.com/
(http://www.pardulon.com/img/galerie/s003/s003_2.jpg)
(http://www.pardulon.com/img/galerie/s003/s003_3.jpg)
(http://www.pardulon.com/img/galerie/s002/s002_3.jpg)