Plenty of room on the deck for cargo, floggings, and shooting albatross. Future boats will have a shorter, less boxy cabin.
The sail was actually fun to make. I used coffee stained printer paper and followed a couple of tutorials I found on youtube. There is an insane amount of detail that can be added, but I chose to stop just before adding reef-points. Adding dozens of tiny strings hanging off the sail would've neither contributed to the beauty of the model, nor left me with time to blog about it!
Since a sail is more or less a blank canvas, I felt a big ol' John Blanche style Evil Sun would be rather handsome. I painted it by building up layers of washes, so the colors would be somewhat subdued. That said, the red was a bit of an adventure. I slowly built up the shading with a transparent orange and a woodgrain ink, before covering it all with a glaze mixed from transparent orange and flat red. I wasn't 100% sure the glaze would work, so there was some shivering of timbers at the end.
Any guesses what the sail on the next boat will feature?
That's a really nice piece! Amazing work!
ReplyDeletehow are you able to post a pic? all my tries have failed.
ReplyDeleteWhere are you trying to post a pic?
DeleteThat ship is the business, I love it! Your players are lucky bastards. The shimmering is magical.
ReplyDeleteFantastic looking ship. Playing in your WFRP game must be great. I've been toying with the idea of building ships for some Warhammer Ahoy. Sorry it took so long to comment, not sure what I was doing. I also became a follower, I don't think you had the widget last time I was on the blog, but I have you in my feed reader.
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