Wednesday, May 13, 2026

A 'Cottage' for my Medieval Town...A Big One!

    From the 'Misty Hollow' line of Medieval/Fantasy buildings, the humbly-named 'Cottage'
I've always thought of a cottage as a relatively small, rural building. I recently picked up a 3-D printed building from a new source while at Little Wars 2026. Phalanx Games & Sundry carries the Misty Hollow line of medieval/fantasy buildings. This one is called simply "Cottage," but at two stories and a soaring, peaked roof, it is the little cottage that could! Don't get me wrong -- these are gorgeously designed buildings, with all kinds of neat details like weather vanes on the roof, metal cupolas, and a combination of building materials in its construction, including wood, stone, brick, and stucco.  

    I really like the variety of textures -- wooden beams, stone, stucco, brick, wood tile roof & more!
Although these are more expensive than Rich Brown of RRB Minis is selling me the Ferisia line of 3-D printed buildings, I always try to support the vendors at shows that I attend. So, in addition to four ziploc bags full of MDF bases from their buckets, I snagged this cool building to add to my growing medieval town. An interesting twist is that the windows, door, and weather vane come in a ziploc bag and you must attach them yourself. Unfortunately, my bag was short one of the windows, so I left it open until I could scratch-build a replacement. It is very nicely printed with deep details, particularly in the wood grain. It fits together easily, and feels sturdy -- except I imagine that if I drop the roof on the weather vane, it will snap off easily and be a goner...ha, ha!

   I think the pink...er, salmon stucco turned out really nice & blends well with the red window panes
I did my usual Krylon Fusion matte black spray primer followed up (once dry) by a 50/50 mix of water and acrylic black paint. Then, I had to sit back and decide on colors. The roof is composed of wooden tiles -- modeled to look like some of which have "fallen off," exposing the wooden boards beneath. There is both stone and stucco in its construction, with exposed brick beneath the stucco. On the inside, there are stucco walls with wooden beams. The floor on the first floor looks like it is some kind of decorated tile, while the upstairs is wooden. There is a wooden staircase on the first floor leading through a rectangular hole in the floor of the second. Interestingly, the windows on the website picture are a different style than the ones I had included.   

    Nice look at the roof tiles and the pale green coloring I added to their worn, wooden look
I began with the wooden tiles of the roof, which is a lot of the surface area. The building is designed with what I call "dormers," places where it projects on from its main axis -- each with its own little roof. The effect is a very cool and interesting looking. I decided that the wooden tiles have faded over the years and not been repainted recently. So, I did a medium brown wet brush over the black prime, followed by a craft paint Khaki highlight. I set the "dry brush" aside, and picked up a finer point brush. I used a faded green "mossy" color to pick out lines of color on each roof tile. It was time consuming, yes, but I thought it would give a great effect to have a faded, worn roof effect. 

    2nd Floor of the Cottage, which certainly deserves a more grand name than something so simple!
The heavy wooden beams that frame the roof I painted in dark brown, then after it had dried overnight, added a dry brush of Camo Brown. I also used that color on roof boards where the tiles were missing. Once again, I waited for it to dry, and then I did a Khaki highlight on the beams. There is so much rich woodwork in this building's design, I wanted to bring out the full effect of the colors. In fact, doing the woodwork and beams was the most time consuming part of this building.

    1st floor of the cottage -- I really like the recessed pattern printed onto the floor & wooden staircase
Simultaneously, I was working on the interiors of the first and second story sections. I always like to finish the interiors first on buildings before I start on the exteriors. That way, I can grasp it by exterior while painting the interior, and vice versa when I move on to the outer part of the building. I chose a Maple Sugar craft color for the interior stucco, and then once it had dried, highlighted it with a very light tan. Next, I picked out the wooden interior beams with same dark brown/Camo Brown/khaki that I used on the wooden beams on the outside. For the window frames and diagonal "leading," I chose a darker, Moroccan red. The tiled floor I painted a orange-brown color, with a Maple Sugar highlight. Then I did a dark red wash over the floor to tone down the brighter color and make it look less like the color of the walls. I really like the effect of the floor pattern.

    Narrow frontage of the cottage, with the door that swings open and closed
Moving on to the exterior, I painted the stucco surfaces on the outside in a salmon color. What?? You're painting a building pink, Mike? A faded pink stucco is actually not that uncommon, plus I planned to dry brush it so it ended up being a very dulled-down pink. Moving on to the stone, I decided to try to paint the stone sections in contrasting colors. One block would be a dark gray and the next one would be light gray. Kind of like the alternating bands or stripes of color on the stone archways of the Great Mosque/Cathedral of Cordoba, Spain. There was a danger that this would be one step too far, with all the other decorations on this building. However, I thought that the way the stonework was designed, it could work and give a clever accent effect. So, I did a very dark gray base coat on all the stones first. The dark stones would get only a medium gray highlight, while the lighter stones would receive a light gray dry brush to look much lighter. You be the judge whether the alternating stone pattern worked well or not!

    This 3-D printed building, bought from Phalanx Games & Sundry, fits together very well
For the stucco, I painted it a salmon first, followed by a khaki dry brush. Through the years, I have found that color combo gives a nice faded rose look. Of course, all of this was after doing the exterior woodwork in the same trio of wood colors of the roof, and the windows in their red. Because I liked the photo of this building on Phalanx Games' website, I copied their two-tone metal cupola and weather vane. All parts received a Steel base coat, then Pewter highlights for the silver/steel sections. The Bronze sections were painted bronze with a bright gold highlight to hopefully give the effect of the sun gleaming off its metallic parts. I did a black wash on the building to tone it down and keep it from looking too bright. I also felt this would tie the whole building together.  

At Little Wars, this building had caught my eye. I like it even more all painted up! I'm sure it will add to the look of my medieval town tabletop. Hopefully, the mish-mash of various manufacturers I've used for the buildings end up improving the look of the tabletop, not something that detracts from it. What do you think? 

    Only part of the building that I'm not crazy about is the flat, featureless dragon wind vane
So, what else is on my painting desk? The next batch of Elves is underway. It feels like its been a long time since I painted Elves, but I'm sure it really hasn't been. As for terrain, I'm not sure if I am going to start on another of the large buildings I have or wait till I pick up some of the smaller ones that Rich will have ready for me at the show. Stay tuned to see what I end up deciding!

MINIATURES Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Miniatures acquired in 2026: 176
  • Miniatures painted in 2026: 99

TERRAIN Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Terrain acquired in 2026: 7
  • Terrain painted in 2026: 26

SCATTER Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Scatter acquired in 2026: 17
  • Scatter painted in 2026: 59 

1 comment:

  1. Outstanding paint job. The building definitely leans to the fantasy side of medieval. If that is a cottage, how big would a real house be?

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