I was working on two sets of Citadel Wood and had other dead trees lying around unfinished, so did this whole lot together.
Let's do the miscellaneous first:
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| That's a Warlord Napoleonic figure there for comparison. These are not great trees to me, but when mixed in with the rest of my Haunted Forest collection, they will be cool to have alongside them. The print lines are evident, the bark is not quite right and the design suggests long feces rather than a tree branch. For a Haunted Wood, they look suitably uncanny. |
Ok! On to the Citadel Wood!
My hobbying practice often, as you may have gathered, involves starting a project, losing interest about halfway through, then moving on to something else. This was one such endeavor. The canopies were stolen to make these:
Then, I primed the trunks and the bases and made quite a bit of progress with the bases before getting distracted for a few years.I broke another brittle Wargames Atlantic printed model of Napoleon's Women Camp Followers and was so pissed, I pushed those to the side and did this instead. How many have to break before I finish painting them?
The bases were easy enough to finish. I remember quitting as I was uninterested in painting all the skulls, roots and details. But I had done the stones, and all the earth so this was easy to pick up where I left off. And there's the rub: I only buy what I'll use, so it was inevitable I would circle back to this. But rather than starting from scratch, the project was half finished - a couple days work! Breaking up a big project into smaller pieces is sound advice, but it usually doesn't require years of delay before picking up the next few tasks.
In any event, la!:
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| They look "busy." |
Let's look at them in their component parts:
The Bases:
You'll recall I did a post about Leaf Punches from Greenstuff World. For the leaf piles I used generic "dead leaves" but, on the stones, I glued those nicely shaped punched leaves so that when you look, it suggests all the leaves are actually leaves and not just flat irregularities.
Let's look at the trees themselves:
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| In two sets of Wood, there are three unique trees. Assembly can make them even more unique as there are many options when placing the lesser, smaller branches. |
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| I don't want duplicates, so all are different. |
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| They look nice enough on their own, I think. |
Though they look busy and cluttered, most woods do. Mission accomplished! I do need to seal them up when the weather warms up a bit.



















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