Mounted knights ride by a miniature stone chapel building in 28mm wargame scale. 3D printed with FDM.
Sir Tobe Namedlater and the Yselian Falcon ride by the chapel

My FDM printer (an Elegoo Neptune 3 — which is an absolute steal at Amazon right now, check the link) has been down for sometime due to a loose connection with the touch screen interface, which is a shame because it’s really a low-fuss printer (it has auto-bed leveling, auto-resume for power failures, and pauses the print when it’s running out of spool). I have to get on the phone with tech support about it, but I have so many other projects going I can’t be bothered to do it.

That hasn’t stopped me from working on new 3D printed buildings, though! I bought a couple of very reasonably priced multipart medieval buildings at the Harrisburg Comic-Con this past weekend. Here is the first, a stone chapel, or some other type of building with a tower. The interior is not at all laid out like a church, so it could be a private residence with a tower (perhaps on the thinly settled border region, in which case the tower is an essential safeguard.

This marks a milestone because it’s the first miniature I’ve ever used an oil wash on. In fact, it’s the first time I’ve ever used oil paints at all (even when I was trying to emulate Bob Ross wet-on-wet technique several years ago, I used acrylics, which was a failure since they dry too fast). I have to say I am glad of the results. I didn’t quite achieve the depth and darkness that I hoped, but even so the result is much better than the acrylic washes I’ve been doing on other buildings, and requires much less tidying (or de-tide-marking, if you pardon the pun) afterward.

The painting was simple, but somewhat time consuming. I started with a gray spray primer and built up the stonework and tile roofs with a couple of progressively brighter dry brushing, painted the wooden frame, floors, and ladder, and then washed it. I’m not sure how look it took to dry, since I came back several hours later, but it was good to go by then. I then went back to work with the dry brush on all of the parts. At the end, I picked out a few roof tiles and foundation stone to paint in different colors for visual interest (and to represent replacements and weather damage, in case of the roof tiles).

By Michael DiBaggio

Michael is an Orthodox Christian, husband to the winsome Shell Presto, and father of two children. A longtime miniature wargamer and RPG enthusaist, he is the author of several novels and short stories of heroic adventure set in his Ascension Epoch universe. He is the host of the Attention Span Labs channel on YouTube.

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