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Miniature Building Authority's "Customs House" completed with my own scratch-built roof |
I have this little thing that I like to do with items I've purchased from a vendor at a convention: finish them! What's more, my goal is to try to finish painting up what I bought from that dealer before I see them again at the next convention. Well, Kirk from
Miniature Building Authority will be in Columbus, OH, this weekend as a vendor at
Buckeye Game Fest. When I saw him back at
Siege of Augusta in January, I bought MBA's "Customs House" -- a large, two-story resin building. It has been sitting on my painting desk since then, patiently waiting while getting "ditched" by trailers, Viking longships, and dozens of scatter pieces.
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Some of my 28mm Pulp figures investigate the MBA Customs House - a grand old resin structure! |
The wait was over, though! If I was going to finish it before Buckeye Game Fest, it had to get done this week! Step one was to create a roof. Kirk sold it to me at Siege of Augusta for $40, less than half of what it normally sells for, because this one did not have a roof. While the Customs House had been sitting on my desk for months, I had been thinking of how I would prepare it for the tabletop. I decided to use two slabs of bass wood for the roof, taped together on the underneath.
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I used some dollhouse scenery shingles to make my roof - slightly out of scale, but looks nice
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Now, what to do for the roof's surface? It was too large for either of
the two plastic pattern sheets that I had (they would have worked
perfect). The craft store I bought them from and all the train stores no
longer carried them. I could order them online, but they wouldn't arrive
in time. While walking around Hobby Lobby, I found doll house roof
shingles in strips. They were out of scale, yes, but with the black roof
tile texture they were perfect. They even had adhesive backing. Score! I
started with the bottom of the roof and laid each strip down, with the
next one above it overlapping it. Wouldn't you know it, though? The
length of the strips was about an inch short of the roof width, so I had
to cut and add an extra half shingle in each row. It worked perfect,
otherwise. Once I reached the peak of the roof, I cut a long strip of
cardboard, folded it in half to match the roof angle, and epoxied it
down. I painted it black and flocked it to match the shingle pattern.
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Close up of the front entrance and the lovely blue shade of wash I colored the exterior with |
I traced the "pediment" -- the triangle-shaped part of the roof rests upon -- onto a piece of cardboard. This was used as a guide to cut out two triangular pieces of foam core which were glued to the underside of the roof, fixing the two bass wood slabs at the correct angle to fit snugly onto the building. I used black Sharpie marker on the edges of the roof piece, and brown paint on the part of the underside that would show. Other than a clear coat, the roof was done and looked great, I felt.
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A look at the rear entrance of the Customs House with its archways and my "oriental carpets" |
As for the surface of the building, the resin piece came semi-painted, I would say. There was definitely gray wash done on it, as well as gray paint on the interior. By my standards, though, it looked half finished. I decided to see what just doing a colored wash on the surface would look like. I wanted to utilize the nicely molded exterior texture of the Customs House. So, I put three drops of Vallejo blue paint into my palette of water to create a light wash and brushed it on with a wide, flat brush. I was kind of holding my breath, hoping I didn't ruin it. I really liked how it turned out, though. It preserved the pockmarked surface it is modeled with, and used its texture to my advantage. Another thing I like about the exterior is portions are modeled to look worn, with the exterior plaster having fallen away and the mud bricks (I think) exposed. I painted those in a light brown with a khaki dry brush. After examining it at this stage, I went back and forth whether to do an overall brown or black wash. I decided NOT to, afraid that it might "erase" my lovely faded blue exterior color.
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Interior of the building - note there is no 2nd floor, so I made one with MDF and bass & balsa wood |
As for interior, I decided the gray it came painted with wasn't fancy enough for a Customs House or official government building. I did a wet brush of light blue over all of the interior walls. Once that dried, I did a very light black wash over it. I think this made the interior walls looked nice, too. Not as nice as the exterior, but more than just functional. The clock was ticking, though. I would see Kirk on Thursday and I really, really wanted it to be done (and a blog post about it created) before then.
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A look at my 2nd floor (with open stairwell) which was trimmed to fit precisely on the first floor walls |
The blue wash from the exterior and the black wash from the interior had run onto the model's floor and made the gray concrete floor look even less fancy than it had originally. It needed prettied up, I felt. Government officials work here every day, and they need a nice place to show off for the ordinary folk who come to their office how important they are! I decided I would paint each room's floor a different, darker color -- Midnight blue, Hunter green, Moroccan red, Terra Cotta orange, and Dun yellow. Then, I would cover up part of that floor surface with a printed out oriental rug. Now,
that's fancy! I went online and found images of oriental rugs and resized them to fit (and match the color of) each room. I put them on a flash drive to be printed off the next day at the local office supply store.
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Speaking of the stairwell, here is the 1st floor portion of it with its stone staircase and bright rugs |
It was Tuesday evening, at this point, though...aack! There was one more thing I wanted to modify on this model. I wanted to create a flat surface to place onto the walls of the first floor, acting as the first floor's ceiling and the second story's floor. I used some MDF material that I had, carefully measuring it and trimming it to fit. Then, at dinner, I had the bright idea to cut out the portion over the interior stairwell for gaming purposes. I did that, and proceeded to fall down a rabbit hole. Next, I decided to do walls for each of the two second story rooms and glued them to the MDF, then scrap booking paper for the floors, then a door leading to each room. Sigh. I was setting myself up for a very busy Wednesday! I should probably have left it at a simple ceiling/floor piece with some carpet-like texture on it...but nooooo! I had to get all fancy!!
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A close up of the 1st floor's oriental rugs - images downloaded and printed out on a paper |
One of the last things I did Tuesday evening was epoxy the Customs House down onto its own MDF base that I'd cut. I still would have to do the flocking to blend the exterior onto the base. And clear coat it. Heaven forbid it was humid on Wednesday and I couldn't spray it...! Oh no...what? Oh, yeah. I am pre-writing my blog on that very busy Tuesday before that very busy Wednesday. I am crossing my fingers and hoping everything comes out all right.
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Another look at the exterior - the rear of the building seems to be a hub of activity |
Cut to Wednesday evening: Loving how it is turning out. The oriental rugs are a classy touch. The second floor turned out better than I feared it might. Just finishing up flocking and taking photos tonight. This was a lot to get done in a week or so, but I'm happy to say I manged it.
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The cool shaded interior of the Customs House - reserved for government officials & their clients! |
MINIATURES Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025
- Miniatures acquired in 2025: 119
- Miniatures painted in 2025: 60
TERRAIN Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025
- Terrain acquired in 2025: 13
- Terrain painted in 2025: 22
SCATTER Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025
- Scatter acquired in 2025: 53
- Scatter painted in 2025: 55
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Another look from above of the colorfully decorated interior of the Customs House |
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What secret deals are being made inside the shady interior of this thick European-style building? |
Lovely work Mike, it's a cracking looking model and your painting and additions really bring it to life. Love the carpets/rugs etc. they really add to the look. This building should look great on the table, real good addition to your collection.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I was really happy with how the rugs look in the building. Thanks for the kind words, as always!
DeleteA great looking building Mike!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ray! I appreciate it...
DeleteBeautifully done! Seems like MBA has a number of offerings available at shows but not on their website, as I can't find this one there.
ReplyDeleteI will talk to him about it at the convention tomorrow. I wonder if it is discontinued? I'll let you know...
DeleteGreat building. Your paint job really brings out the character of the exterior. And the rugs are fantastic.
ReplyDelete