Sunday, April 6, 2014

Painting the Coaching Inn

Following up on my review of the Coaching Inn from Tabletop World I now present the finished piece.

As I mentioned in my review the Coaching Inn does not require assembling: other than cleaning up the piece all you need to do is glue the two chimneys to the roof and glue the fence/balustrade on the balcony.

The Scratch-built Balustrade

Speaking of the balustrade: I am not too keen on the fence that comes with the building. It looks too gothic/fantasy for my taste - I prefer a slightly more conservative/low-key style. Because of that I chose to build a new balustrade from wooden sticks.




Comparison of the original balustrade and my scratch-built one


Painting the Inn

The painting process was pretty much the same as with my previous Gierburg buildings. And it was a long one! With all the details the building has, tending to each shingle of the roof and each stone of the walls and - the most tedious work of all - painting all the windows with their grating, I can't count the many hours that went into this building. But it makes it only all the more satisfying once you are finished with the piece, lean back and look at it...

The finished Coaching Inn

Finally, this is what the completed Coaching Inn looks like:




Gangs fighting it out in the streets of Gierburg


A firebrand speaking to a mob of Gierburg peasants
from the balcony of the coaching inn


5 comments:

  1. Excelent work, as always.
    Congratulations.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey Chris, that looks phenomenal! Wonderful little conversion too. Looks much better than the original fence, definitely.
    Also, the coaching inn blends in incredibly well with the rest of the town.
    Now that this one is finished are you going to get more buildings?

    Joao

    ReplyDelete
  3. pretty nice blog, following :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. The painted Coaching Inn is looking great.

    Tony

    ReplyDelete

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