Saturday 25 January 2014

Roman buildings - How to

After a lot of Messing about I´ve  got the last two pics uploaded.
Basically, if you can measure and cut at a right angle..it´s easy.

First of..what do you Need? For the structure (walls) I use 1cm thick insulating foam. It´s cheap and one pack should allow the creation of  dozens of buildings.

Then some fine dry sand, some PVA glue, a sharp knife, right angle, some board Pins, a pen, corrugated paper from a biscuit packet (or similar)  and some normal dress Pins, some card (Cereal packet or similar) and a ruler.
Yes..the PVA is in an old washing up liquid bottle..it´s easy to use and the cap doesn´t get all clogged up which means an airtight seal.

Paints I use are cheap acrylics, the sort used for painting walls. You´ll need White, chocolate Brown and red and a 1" Paintbrush.
This building will be a Taverne with a small storehouse attached but after making a few your Imagination can lead you anywhere, curved arches, complicated roofing with Loggias, balconys and and......
Mark up and cut out the wall sections. For marking out the pattern, don´t use felttip pens or biros with blue ink.  They can write easily on the polystyrene but the ink bleeds really badly into the PVA - sand mix and later bleeds into the paints. I found this out when I made the Roman baths.  I had to glue tinfoil over the effected Areas, then cover that with sand and PVA mix to seal the ink in. Okay, I found a solution but it wasted time.
After prefitting to see if the wall sections match up and the building looks square, glue them together. The Dress Pins are used to hold the parts in place as it drys. I´ve recently found out that toothpicks are also good. A short length of one pointy end and then push it in completely. This doesn´t work where there are openings like doors etc but the toothpicks hold way better than the Pins.
When it´s dry, remove the Pins (in the case of toothpicks they stay put) and  smear PVA over the walls (just a thin layer) and sprinkle fine sand over them. As can be seen, I´ve added a floor to this one. This building  will have a removable Roof so the floor is necessary but in general the flooring  doesn´t have to be added.

As the flooring is made from the same 1cm polystyrene it means the door will end up higher than the outside floor and steps will have to be added. As I´d planned to add a floor I also made the doorway 1cm higher to take this into account.
When the sand has dried, paint.
Another step, window and door Frames. Like the flooring,  these aren´t  necessary but it adds to the General look of the finished building.  These are simply made from coffee sticks, cut to length, the top and bottom of the Frame glued in first, then the sides. Any small gaps can be filled by putting some PVA on your fingertip and smearing it over the cracks. The easiest way of placing the pieces of coffee stick is to use an old pair of tweezers.
Now the Roof. Thin Card folded and cut to shape. Put PVA along the top of all the walls and then attach the Card, Holding it down with the board Pins. It´s best to start the  pinning down from the top of the Roof and working down to the bottom.
The tiles. On the left is the back of the corrugated paper which is first marked off (on the back of the sheet, not the corrugated side) in 1 cm strips. Then paint the corrugated side with chocolate Brown paint. It´s best not to paint the whole sheet in one go but cut it in half because as it gets wet it warps  and you can cover half of the sheet faster before it warps than the whole sheet. 
When the corrugated paper has dried cut it into strips.  Simply apply glue to the back of each Strip and attach, overlapping each new Strip a tiny bit over the previous one.  It doesn´t work as well if the glue is just smeared on the Card as the overlap doesn´t attach properly to the previous layer.
Finally the tiles for the top of the Roof. These are made with  0.5cm wide strips of Card cut into lengths of about 0.8 cm´s. Each one is then curved lengthways over a Paintbrush handle.

Keeping hold of the Paintbrush, dip the end of the handle into some PVA, smear it under the tile and attach. It´s a good idea to keep a tissue handy to occasionally wipe off any excess PVA from the Paintbrush.



When it´s all dried, paint with chocolate Brown, then let  it dry (a hairdryer Speeds this up) and dry brush firstly with mix of brick red and chocolate Brown, then a final drybrush with brick red.






17 comments:

  1. Very clever, love the sand on the walls...

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  2. Another project for me to try. Thanks good tutorial.

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  3. Great tutorial, Paul! I love how you used material that are not only easily obtained, but not hard to construct. The sand has a very nice effect too. In the past (distant at that), I used styrofoam for walls, but rubbed on plaster. The sand looks much better. Best, Dean

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    1. I´ve tied plaster in the past but ended up adding PVA to it to get it to stick to the polystyrene. The sand and PVA is way cheaper and adds some weight to the buildings.

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  4. Interesting...and intriguing... :-)

    Marzio.

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  5. Excellent!! Almost sounds easy! Thanks Paul!

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  6. Wow! That looks to be pretty easy and very effective none the less.
    Thanks for sharing.

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  7. That's strange like all seems to be with you !
    you're a sorcerer and I'm bewitched ....

    Many thanks, Paul !

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    1. I´ve got an idea to use it foir medieval or eastern style buildings..a test building will come later:-D

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  8. Thanks, it seems soooo simple ;-)

    V

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  9. That was made to look deceptively simple! I sure there was a cross word or two along the way!

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    1. it is easy..way easier than painting bods..and once you´ve got the Basic idea it gets easier and you ca create ever more complicated buildings. The worst part is getting the Roof structure correct. Get that wrong and dooooom!!

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  10. BRAVO, BRAVO!!
    Excellent!! Thank you for this tutorial.

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  11. Fantastic tutorial Paul! I may have to make some Roman buildings now!

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  12. Thank you for this step by step Paul! Maybe you can do a workshop at the next FIGZ! I will be on the front row to follow it! ;-)

    Greetings
    Peter

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