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I have also added a separate page to the blog for the Tower of Magic with a brief summary of all the rooms of the ToM in the one spot. The link is just below this and above the main body of the blog, or you can just click here.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

The Next Level


I have to confess . . .   When I figured out the number of steps in the castle a couple of weeks ago I said 25 steps by 5 floors, that's 100 steps.  I hope it doesn't take you as long as it did me to realise how very terribly wrong that little bit of simple mathematics is.  There are, of course, actually 125 steps.  At least I can be certain when I tell you the castle now has double the floors it had last week.


At least I seem to have managed to get the measurements right in building the castle, at least so far as the next floor sits on the basement and matches up with level of the door opening on the stair tower.


One mistake I did make was to put an arched ceiling in the basement dungeon.  I used toothpicks to make bars to secure the dungeon, but continuing the bars up to a curved ceiling and having them fit properly is not easy.  So at the moment anyone wanting to escape the dungeon only has to climb over the top of the bars.  In future I will have another go at sealing off this escape route either with bars or a solid piece of wall.


Above the dungeons are the castle kitchens.  The floors are tiled with pieces of orange EVA foam cut into squares and glued in place.  This was given a wash of brown paint to create a more terracotta tone and 'grouted' with a mix of pollyfiller, water and grey paint.  Under the arch on the left side of the room is an area separate to the kitchen that will probably a scullery or buttery.  The right side of the kitchen is where the kitchen proper will be.  The opening in the back wall is for the ovens.


On the opposite side of the castle I used a door kit from Petite Properties to add a door to the wall dividing the well room from the alchemists lair.  The door itself is quite effective but when you see it against one of the doorway arches I cut you'll notice it looks very short.  It looks even worse against a 48th sized person.


Working to scale, a 48th (1/4") person the equivalent of 6' tall should be about 1 1/2" tall, therefore a doorway should logically be at least that high too, preferably a little higher.  Yet the professionally made to scale door is no more than 1 1/4" high.  Set against my admittedly generous arches, this door really looks wrong.  Worse, I have five more of these doors to use higher up in the castle and they're all going to look silly too.  Up until now I've loved everything I've bought from Petite Properties but it seems items they sell as 48th scale aren't all quite 48th scale.


Above this dwarf door is a pretty swanky room with a smart red and black tiled floor and linenfold panelling look walls.  Like the kitchen, the floor tiles are cut from EVA foam, but this time laid closely enough not to need grout in a smart diamond pattern.  The panelling is just printed paper as is the fire surround and brick backing.  The wall on the right of the room is where the castle's front door will be located, making this room the castle's entry hall.  It will also be the armoury with displays of weaponry and seating for newly arrived guests waiting to be shown further into the castle.



Wednesday, February 18, 2015

The Basement Begins


The basement level of the castle is progressing with the internal walls added and given a stone look finish to match the floors.  The finished castle will open on both sides, rather than from the front or back as most dollshouses typically do.  The above photo is the left side which houses the stair tower and two other basement rooms which will likely be a well room (to provide the castle's water supply) and either a store room or an alchemists lab.  Yeah, alchemists lab sounds like more fun to me too.


The opposite side of the basement level is currently one big open space.  This will be divided into sections by adding bars to create a dungeon/cell and a treasury with a guard room in-between them.  Of course, housing the castle's treasure in full view of the castle's prisoners may not be the best idea . . . . so maybe I'll swap the positions of the treasury and the alchemists lab.


The ceilings on this level will be barrel vaulted (i.e. arched).  I'm achieving this by cutting some EVA foam to size and 'squishing' it into shape.  At this point the ceilings aren't quite finished or installed but hopefully you can get the idea of how they should look.


As you can see from overhead, the ceilings are currently very uneven.  I will cut some ribs out of balsa which will sit on top of the foam ceiling and under the solid floor of the next level and help hold the ceiling to an even curve.  But that is still to be done . . .

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

100 Steps to Heaven


The first 12th scale structure I built from scratch was a castle, so it is fitting that the first 48th scale structure I do from scratch is also a castle.  It has nothing at all to do with an obsession . . . .  The glorious thing about a 48th scale castle is that the smaller size means there is more space to include features that just wouldn't fit into a 12th scale castle (at least not if you still want to be able to lift it and fit it through doorways).  This castle will be six floors high, but will still have ceilings high enough to add features like a vaulted ceiling, something I never could manage to squeeze into a 12th scale structure.


But before I tell you about the castle itself, I'll start at the beginning and tell you about the base.  The castle rests on a thin piece of MDF that was once the back of a picture frame (I must have used the frame as a clear front for a roombox at some point).  It's something in the area of 22cm wide by 45cm long.  I glued polystyrene foam over the MDF to raise the ground level of the castle up about an inch and carved some of the foam away to create some uneven ground and a river bed in front of the castle.


All the edges of the foam was covered with Paper Clay to create the look of rocky ground.  I should point out that what I buy labelled 'paper clay' seems to be a totally different product to what everyone else knows as paper clay.  It's a clay that has the consistency of chewing gum, is kind of spongy when dry and still slightly flexible.  It's the flexibility that made me choose it for the edges of the base as it won't chip easily if it gets bashed against something.


The flat area that forms the floor of the lowest level of the castle was covered with a thin coat of pollyfiller into which lines were carved to create the look of paving stones.  All of this (clay and filler) was then painted with a dark grey and then dry brushed with successively lighter shades of brown.


With the base finished, I started work on the castle stairs.  All six levels of the castle will be accessed from a single stair tower.  The walls of the tower are made of 5mm thick foamboard.  They are lined with a stone block paper printed from a texture found on the internet.  Each of the 100 individual steps in the tower is made of balsa wood.  Not all of the steps are entirely straight, but given all my mathematically calculated plans to ensure the stairs would fit in the tower inexplicably did not work the stairs actually turned out pretty well.


 The stairs are also backwards to the way they would be in an authentic castle.  A castle is traditionally a defensive structure so the stairs would have been designed that anyone going up would have their right side to the wall.  This meant that any attackers trying to storm up the stairs into the castle would not have room to properly swing their swords while the defenders coming down wouldn't be so hampered.  So let's just hope this castle is never invaded . . . .

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

The House on the Hill


Welcome to the fully furnished and landscaped Pumpkin Cottage, or as I now call it, the "House on the Hill".


Upstairs in the cottage is the bedroom.  Originally I wanted to put twin beds in here, but I had to drop back to just the one bed as squeezing two in would mean that one of them posed an immense fire hazard due to the covers being practically in the fireplace.  A double bed would probably have worked, but I'd already made the singles, so being lazy I just dropped back to a single single.


This is the first 48th scale house I've been brave enough to try using polymer clay to make accessories for.  The jug, bowl and chamber pot on this wash stand are examples of this.  So it is possible to make things tiny enough to work in a 48th scale house, but I did spend most of the time I was working with the clay combing the floor for tiny little bits I'd dropped because they were too small to hold onto and work on at the same time.


 Downstairs, there is a kitchen area to the right and a living space on the left.  That floral bar behind the desk is actually a sofa, I just can't get a photo from any angle that allows you to see this.


One thing I don't like about this kit is the ceiling height on the ground floor.  Yes, it may be right for scale, but it is so low it makes it hard to see the details on the far side of the room.  It's not even possible to wiggle the camera in for a good shot of it.


And when you try to get a photo showing the far side of the room, the camera blocks all the light and the flash is so high up on the camera it actually flashes the top floor while photographing the ground floor leaving the ground floor in shadow.  So when working in 48th scale always remember to photograph the furniture before fixing it into place.


With the inside furnished, I started work on the gardens.  Petite Properties do make a garden kit to compliment Pumpkin Cottage, but they didn't have it on their site at the time I bought the kit (and I had spent more than enough money anyway) so my garden is entirely from scratch.  The base is an MDF disc from the craft store intended for use as a place mat.  On top of this I added three layers of polystyrene foam each layer smaller than the last.  This was then carved to create a smooth hill on which the cottage could sit.  The hill was painted green and covered in model railway 'grass'.


The picnic table is another Petite Properties kit and came for free on the front of a Dolls House and Miniature scene magazine some months back.  The whole reason the house has a garden was to find a place to use the table so I felt a little stupid when I realised I hadn't left enough flat ground to sit the table on.  The solution was to use a piece of bark to create a platform for the table to sit upon.


The trees in the garden were all hand made and I think are far the best trees I've ever made.  The trunks are balsa wood dowel.  Bunches of floral wire were pushed into the wood to make branches.  This was then covered with texture paste to give a rough, bark like texture.  After painting the branches were given foliage in the form of lichen moss (again, from model railway suppliers) except the weeping blossom tree in the front of the house which was given flower soft blossoms instead.


The paths were made by taking white sand, fine gravel, a little grey paint for colour and mixing them with PVA glue and then pouring them into place.


The rest of the garden was dotted with flowers made of flower soft in various colours, bushes of more lichen or model rail fake foliage as well as 'rocks' which were either pieces of bark, left over 'path' or actual pieces of pebble.


Unlike so many of the projects I've done recently, I actually really like how this one turned out.  I think I have gained enough experience with 48th scale now to say I'm ready to attempt creating one from scratch.  Just like the first 12th scale building I made from scratch, I'm not thinking small, er unambitiously.  You know how I like castles . . . . . .