@Grumpy Gnome: Thanks very much!
@Ray Rivers:

Thanks!
@OSHIROmodels: Thank you, Sir. This coming from you is extra nice. That Oshiro guy - he knows his buildings building stuff.
@Bloggard: Cheers!
@DintheDin:

Thanks muchly. Yeah, I like working with wood and I like weathering wood.
@FifteensAway: Thanks for the insights! Yeah, that's a thing I noticed about 3d printed buildings as well - it's not like they're very cheap. They're usually almost up there with resins. The factor of robustness is also a good point to bring up, especially with such larger buildings. I fully trust the stuff to work perfectly fine with 6mm terrain, 10mm terrain and so on, but with 28mm.... not sure. It depends, I suppose. Additional work's never a bad idea, because in my mind it's the only way of getting proper "natural looking" textures on there. I think that now that 4Ground is gone we're on a good path with MDF. It's the inexpensive variant for getting a nice sub-structure to build upon. Get somehting you can slap some wall texture on, add some details and file/hack at some of the "wooden" parts and it can look nice. And some of those kits are really well engineered (got a few from Kromlech's 1939 Poland range for this project and was well happy with the price vs. what you get on those. Good kits.). Problem with MDF is that when we see it in person it's very often the sort of "quickly put together and airbrushed for that club 40k tournament".
Hello, hello. I'll be the first to admit - that was a lot of dots to paint.


...but now the buildings are at least painted (okay, the insides aren't

). The above is the largest one, which I'd saved for last. It's scratch-built by yours truly, window and door frames are by Warbases (lovely people, great service. And custom parts requests are handled very swiftly and don't cost much at all), roof tiles are by Charlie Foxtrot (equally lovely people)
Now on to doing the floors of the few that got/em (cow shed, barn, pig sty, hay ....storage ...thing. Phew. And then I finally have to make a decision about whether to use large garden bases or base all the fences and all the scatter terrain separately and put together gardens ad hoc each time. Right now I'm kinda back on doing garden bases, but maybe without gluing the buildings down onto them to keep them switchable.
I was thinking of getting 3mm MDF OR maybe use 2-3mm plasticard (out of fear of warpage and the roughly rectangular gardens I have in mind might just fit the A4 format). Any ideas?
Also, maybe I should change the title of the thread...