Sunday 19 April 2020

A Bumper Apple Harvest



I like tinkering around with bits of terrain and scenery.  I always think this is most fun when the items being tinkered with are things you've had hanging around for a while - maybe they're even items you've been using in games and which need to be freshened up a little bit.  I've been meaning to try and produce a couple of apple trees in 28mm for some time, and the two small trees I had earmarked for the job (very nicely produced by The Last Valley) have been sitting on a shelf forlornly for at least two years.

One of the things about the current world isolation and lockdown is having the chance to pick up some of the projects we might have placed on the back-burner for some time.  I therefore "painted" the trees with very-slightly diluted PVA glue, which really made the trees a lot more solid, added them to a base (from Warbases), did the groundwork, and then started to produce the "apples" from green-stuff.

Errr..... yes, dear readers, I made the apples from green-stuff.  It's not as mad as it seems.  (OK, well, it is a little bit mad, but please - don't give up yet).  Here's some apples - Bramleys - from the trees in my garden last autumn.  Some big, some small, a great many are misshapen, and the colours are definitely non-uniform.  


So, in other words, they're perfect to be re-created in green-stuff.  They didn't take long to produce - I did about 50.  Put on iPlayer, Netflix or a DVD (I chose the very good "Richard II" in "The Hollow Crown" series) and the time flies.


Then, when the apples have set, superglue them to the branches.  I also did a few windfalls on the ground and also added a couple of green-stuff eggs for some chickens I had painted recently.  The eggs are a bit large - as some posters on Twitter correctly noted - but hey, it was Easter and that's the time for all sorts of miracles.



When the apples are securely glued on, they're easy to paint with a base of light-ish green (Vallejo Lime Green), and a glaze of red (Vallejo Red and Dark Vermillion).  I'm enjoying using the Vallejo Glaze Medium - just take Vallejo Red (or Dark Vermillion for some variety), and dilute with the Vallejo glaze medium, and the result is a (hopefully) realistic tone for the apples both on the tree and collected in the apple barrels.  The eggs got painted a shade of peachy-ivory.  (And a big shout out and thank you to Nick - Moiterei - for suggesting the Vallejo Glaze Medium on the comments on this Blog some months back!)





And that was it.  Hopefully allowing battles to take place in an orchard, and for the Flemish apple harvest to be looted for years to come!


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16 comments:

  1. That's really cool. Like you say normal apples are not one size.

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    1. So very true... for every four decent apples, there's always one runty, stunted one!

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  2. A fine post on how to grow your own Sidney, bookmarked for future reference thank you.

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    1. We're very much into growing our own at "Roundwood's World", Phil ;) Thanks so much for dropping by!

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  3. Yes, absolutely bonkers, but I totally approve! They look stunning.

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    1. Bonkers and approved by Lord Awdry... that'll do for me!! Thanks Michael!

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  4. Splendid post, entertaining and informative, how Reithian!
    Best Iain

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    1. Thanks so much, Iain!! Wait until I get on to painting domestic tartan rugs ;)

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  5. Being a terrain maker i find the little details add so much to a model. These look fantastic, and your colours are spot on....

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    1. Many thanks indeed. It is just a table marker, but as you say - it's things like this that people always ask about. Those little details which catch the eye...

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  6. You're bonkers! But you already knew that, right? Still, despite your apparent madness the results are quite convincing indeed. Thanks for the mention as well and I'm glad it was of some use to you.

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    1. Thanks so much, Nick! "Bonkers" is very much what I try to bring to the table! And the tip on the Vallejo Glaze Medium was fantastic - a subject of a whole, additional, blog post to come, in fact!

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