Sunday, 29 March 2026

The 1990 Warhammer Townhouse Project


Hello to one and all. 

It has been a fairly hectic two weeks since my last post. Normal story - school (in this case, reports), dentistry (receding gums) and home improvements (ripping out the ghastly old kitchen and replastering ready for the new one to be fitted) and so on. That doesn't mean that I've been idle... quite the opposite in fact as I've been busy working away on the second stage of my White Dwarf modelling articles project. 

Last time the seminal Warhammer Cottage was the star of the show and this time it's close cousin, the Warhammer Townhouse Mk1, gets it's time to shine. In the end, I constructed four models and experimented with the final two largely to see what I could achieve with random household items and DIY favourites that all of us have lying around the house. 

Here, check out my endeavours.


Obviously, I am pleased with them. All of these models are constructed from foamboard, balsa wood and the carboard from old cereal packets. The chimneys are made from the plastic tubes you get on new paintbrushes, snipped to size and superglued on. The walls were textured with watered down polyfilla or in the cases of the rendered buildings, pure polyfilla smoothed on. As before, I used some 'less is more' modelling flock to add a little character and colour variety to the models. Plasticard was cut to size and used as a base, adding strength and security to the scenery pieces. 

Let's have a closer look at the models.


This was actually the final model in the sequence so I was very confident constructing it. I felt secure enough to experiment, hence the balcony style windows and the brickwork. I added some freehand designs to the plaster to give a little character but it all looked a little false. A little distressing and weathering helped to tie the detail in and add a little realism, at least to my eye. The roof was made with strips of cereal box card snipped with scissors into cladding. The zigzag pattern on the roof came from an old piece of kid's wool winding card. What do you all think of the freehand design? Should it stay or go? 


This was the second model I produced and I felt the urge to experiment with the layout of the windows and support beams. In my mind, these buildings would have all been uniquely different, even in the fantastical setting of '80s Warhammer. So why not mix things up a little? Again, I used the other side of the wool card to decorate the roof and used a decent sized blob of PVA to hide a small error around the chimney with flock. Surely no-one will notice?


This was my initial build and the closest to the example given in the article. Everything about the construction of this model was identical to the Warhammer Cottage save about ten years. You may have noticed my handpainted doors. I ummed and erred about how to present these and in the end decided to paint them in the style of the Warhammer Townscape doorways. That publication, and the card buildings from other earlier ranges, are a huge influence on me. Not sure if I have quite got the colours right yet so watch this space to see if I can improve things further with future buildings. 

The paving slabs were created in exactly the same way as the roof only I used a slightly different colour mix when painting them, just to give some much need differentiation to the slate grey tiles. 

For me, this is the classic Warhammer building. I'm sure that I will build more in future as they feel very therapeutic to construct. Go on, have a go too!


Though the plans for this model appeared in White Dwarf 131, the previous issue showed off some of the studio's attempts a month earlier. One of those models was a thatched roof job that caught my eye. You can just notice it to the left handside of the photograph I used to begin this post. Obviously, my skills are not a patch on Dave Andrews or Phil Lewis of old but I still fancied a crack at one. And its probably worth pointing out, I've never tried to create a thatched roof before in my life.

Perhaps it shows?

Anyway, I f you are interested in how I built the roof it is simple. Wire wool. I simply cut the stuff to size and stuck it on with a hot-glue gun. Over that, I painted pure PVA and them several coats of black acrylic paint - the thick stuff from art shops not the Citadel stuff I use for miniatures. The final touch was to drybrush in layers of grey before washing over with green and brown glazes.

The shutters, again inspired by the examples given in WD130, are just snipped cardboard painted and weathered as normal. I tried another 'Townscape' style doorway too, complete with keyhole - which I went back and added to the other models. 


I didn't provide side views last post so I am doing that now. Here you can see the different placement on ancillary windows and beams as well as detail of the brickwork. Again, this was achieved in exactly the same way as the roofs. 


I used the readymade pollyfilla that comes in a tube to create the texture for all of the walls. Either watering it down and applying with a brush or smearing it on with the card spatula. This kind of rendering is extremely effective and well worth experimenting with if you haven't tried it before. 

Trust me, it was my first time. 


And the final sides of the buildings. Which leaves us with one unanswered question. What to do with the windows? I've left them black but I've seen other people paint on glass or tint them in different ways. Some people have used varnish to give the windows a glassy look. If any of you dear readers have any tips for this please do pass them on, I'd love to return to these and my cottages at some point for the final touches. 

Right, first day of the Easter holidays tomorrow. So plenty of time for me to hobby at long last. With the articles in White Dwarf 130 and 131 now complete on my little odyssey its time to open the dusty pages of White Dwarf 132 and attempt the Mines and Hills of the dwarfs.

Wish me luck. 

Orlygg

Saturday, 14 March 2026

Orlygg Goes Podcasting

As you may know, I have been fiddling around in my workshop with the lighting and cameras that I own trying to take better images of my work. I'm still getting some shadow here and there but at least the colour is coming through in greater vibrancy. 


I've been trying to take some snaps again. See what you think with the little range of figures I've posted here.? All were painted last year are really need so suitable scenery to pose alongside. But then you'll know I'm trying to do something about that.

This post finds me dragging myself away from my new found love of early '90s Warhammer modelling nostalgia to type a few words about a podcast I was invited to contribute too. Quite why anyone would want to listen to me froth at the mouth about this blog, my hobby endeavours and my adventures interviewing Warhammer celebs over the years baffles me. But Matthew McLean over at the Tabletop Miniature Hobby Podcast seemed keen. 

And so it happened.

If you are interested in my disjointed and apocryphal ramblings then follow the link to Matthew's site. There is loads of content to be found there including podcast interviews with many of the hobby giants this blog often references. Finding myself amongst them even in a small way is incredible and thoroughly undeserved. 

Here's the link.


https://bedroombattlefields.com/orlyggs-realmofchaos80s-blog-oldhammer-ansell-years/


You know how I love the Skeleton Horde! I'm also keen on this Errol Flynn type paladin I painted last year. I was never happy with the way I captured him and my fledgling metallics. I think I've done a better job here. 

Gandalf, Gollum and Bilbo. These models saw me turning a corner last year by being respectable attempts at a paintjob. 



I am busy working on the next of the Dave Andrews and Phil Lewis Modelling Workshop projects as we speak. I've built four of the smaller townhouses using the article in White Dwarf 131. Two are ready for painting while the remaining models are more experimental. I'm aiming to build something closer to the variants published in WD 130 alongside the cottage model.

Hopefully lots to show off soon.

Orlygg

Saturday, 7 March 2026

A Rough Month in the Warhammer Cottage

One of the example cottages from White Dwarf 130. It is well worth tracking down these old mags if you are just using pdfs like I once did. There is nothing like the original article for inspiration. 


"So you got it then," the older lad asked. He towered over me, rucksack slung over his shirted shoulder while his blazered buddy lingered alongside. These were older boys, from the Upper School and the speaker was the brother of one of my classmates. Normally, such lofty beings wouldn't have deemed to talk to an underling such as myself. Year 8s didn't exist to lofty highschoolers. Even when we walked carefully past their bedrooms when visiting our contemporaries' own rooms. They listened to music we didn't know, read Q magazine and talked to girls. 

Now one was addressing me directly and was pretty impatient about it too. 

The reason was simple. My mum was matron at the local hospital and had access to something pretty distant for a youth in the dawn of the '90s. 

A photocopier.

It was September 1990 and we hadn't long been back at school. White Dwarf had just been published and everyone was talking about it. The Warhammer Cottage. The trouble was that the plans needed enlarging unless you fancied adding an additional 33% to the measurements which seemed too fiddly for most. Even the two Upper School boys I now stood in front of. I only knew the speaker. His name was Daniel and he was the brother of my classmate Moley. Daniel was an avid WFRPer, a system that I was then largely unfamiliar with, preferring to play endless games of Blood Bowl with his brother. 

My Dad had taught me to build the Warhammer Cottage the previous weekend, though instead of foamboard we had used plasticard. I'd learnt how to measure, cut and apply balsa wood, to cut out the tiles for the roof, to rough up the flat surfaces with Polyfilla and attempted to paint the thing with enamels, my father's preferred paint. This act had made me a god amongst boys when I'd taken it to school the following Monday and word quickly spread. 

It is hard to explain the impact of the Warhammer Cottage if you weren't there. It was the first time White Dwarf showed you how to do something (at least while I had been reading it) in a step by step fashion. These days we all know of the terrain guides that were published, the suggestions in later editions of WHFB and 40k and the Youtube videos of today. Making scenery has never been easier, even if most of it consists of identikit plastic sprues and lasercut kits. Not so in 1990. We were all fascinated by what we had seen and read and with a little luck, we even had all of the materials at home to begin work. 

You know, I can still feel the awe when looking at this page. The thrill is still there and the need to build my own version of this simple, little model. A great choice of build to inspire thousands of young gamers back in the day. Top work Dave and Phil! 

In my school bag were multiple copies of page 58 of White Dwarf 130, enlarged by 133%. This was the holy grail as we had been taught to lay the plan over foamboard and use pins to create holes. The magazine even included handy blue spots to guide our hands. These holes could then be joined up with a ruler and then cut out. Once the basic shape was there it was really easy to stick the embryonic building together with Copydex, PVA or Cowgum. Then an old box of Frosties could become the roof and matchsticks the woodwork. Sand or cat litter (unused I hope) would give texture and then it was a case of breaking out the Citadel Colour (RIP by the way 1986-2026) or Monster Paint Sets and bringing it to life. 

Daniel and his mate took his copy and swiftly departed. My relevance extinguished. A bit later, he would return the favour and hand me a battered paperback copy of WHRP, which I still own to this day. He'd upgraded to the hardback. The other copies went to eager friends, desperate to ape my build and produce something for their own games at home.

I've never forgotten the excitement of those early builds. The Warhammer Cottage has stayed with me ever since. Perhaps only the Mighty Fortress or Warhammer Townscape hold similar significance. Both of those needed to be paid for mind you, the Warhammer Cottage gave us the opportunity to create something for our games without spending any real money. Always a boon for a '80s kid making his way through this new decade. I was too young to remember the 1970s but I'd completed the '80s and now the 1990s beckoned. Zzap64, the Amiga 500, Monkey Island, Resident Evil, Britpop was all ahead of us. They've all faded somewhat now, but the Warhammer Cottage has stayed with me. I've built many versions through the years, often from memory. I've used the plans with school children for the Great Fire of London, for DT club and so on. From me spread forth numerous Warhammer Cottages even if those doing the building might not have realised. 

My sorry collection of models. Unloved but not forgotten. After months lounging in my workshop it was time to bring them back to life. 

It had been a bittersweet moment and few months back when I received a few surviving models back. Mistreated and ill stored, they were in a sorry state but I was loathed to dispose of them. These were the Warhammer Cottage after all. The pinnacle of boyhood crafting, though sadly none of them were that old. The earliest build is the model front left with the grey roof. This was made from memory before I got my hands on another copy of WD130. The dimensions were slightly off, and the beam placement rather unusual but it is the Cottage through and through, though you can see that I got the window, door and chimney the wrong way around. Like that first model, this one was made from plasticard and cereal box cardbaord. I even took the trouble to glue sand to the walls to create texture and individually placed stones into Milliput to create the cobbles which surround it. The next model to be built was the postcard perfect example front right. Made from the plans in WD130 for this blog many moons ago. The building behind with the blue roof was also constructed shortly after and both cottages saw action at Foundry over the years. The larger one never got further than being undercoated in black. 

What is probably harder to see here is the dust, cobwebs, mould and damage that only having been dumped in a shed for some years could inflict. In cleaning the models up, further damage was dealt, especially on that grey roof. 

Another example piece from White Dwarf 130. This was the one that encouraged me to do different coloured titles. I seem to have gone a bit OTT with the look but I think it adds character. 

After interviewing Wayne last post, I've been thinking about that impossible dream... the spectacular gaming table and of his remarkable scenery. Surely I could do something similar? I've been busy restoring old figures and models from yesteryear so why not the classic Cottage? They would be the first step in creating a decent set up for the models I hope one day to have. Of course, I'm keen to explore this 'Citadelesque' aesthetic I've been waffling about in greater depth and any gaming table I produce would need to be in keeping with the source material. Like something from the back page of White Dwarf in our era or, dare I say it, the first few pages of WFB3. 

So I have been busy over the last few weeks repairing and restoring my surviving models and I feel like I have learnt a great deal, especially about drybrushing and colour harmony. The roofs are now secure, walls patched and woodwork joined. I've added new details, and save the grey-roofed model all of these pieces have been totally repainted. 

Shall we have a look?

And here they are completed. After the refurbishment, MFM even said she'd have one on display in the lounge with her other ornaments - the ultimate praise any enthusiast can receive, surely!?

I hope you like what you see. And that the models are worthy of gracing a gaming table that hopes to replicate Wayne's classic. Starting with the bottom left, you can see that the original Warhammer Cottage boasts a new colour scheme. I am not sure that the blue look works with a pure '80s approach. Searching the internet for other people's attempts (go on, try it is wonderful to see our enthusiasts' attempts) it seemed to me that blue was the go-to colour, perhaps because that ghastly GW house released about 15 years ago sported the same shade. Who knows! I switched that out and played around with some different looks to see what worked for me. 

So from the bottom left, the first cottage's roof was based in Terracotta and drybrushed with Bleached Bone. Getting the angle and amount of painted loaded on the brush took time to acquire so I repainted the basecoat more than once. I picked out the edges of the tiles with Skull White too. Bottom right looks a bit Lilliput Lane now but I'm rather taken by the hotch-potch of shades here. It has a fantasy look about it without being to over the top. This was achieved again with a terracotta base followed by a heavy Hobgoblin Orange drybrush and a tickle or two of Bleached Bone and White. I went back and mixed up various greys and browns and added plenty of water to them. I washed these tones over the bricks and tiles to create subtle differences in colour to try and stop the models looking to uniform. The 'Citadelesque' Warhammer World is a lived-in place, and its inhabitants know nothing of Chaos, or Ratman or the dark dangers of the warp. The people's lived are based on rural reality and I wanted that to show in the colour choices. The final one, back right, was actually the easiest. Ghoul Grey mixed with a little black, followed with a Bleached Bone drybrush and a tickle of Skull White. Roofs are everything on these models and it is worth the time investing in them. 

Let's have a closer look at each model. 

Up close and personal with the Warhammer Cottage. I kept the windows black. I've seen some with handpainted leaded glass which look fantastic. Something to try when I build new models from scratch. 

The walls are painted Skull White, washed over with Orc Brown and then repainted white. I blobbed on the paint in a fairly liberal way as the limewash often is on the old buildings of Essex where I live. The woodwork was just Chaos Black drybrushed over with white. This aged the wood more than using Bleached Bone and added to the tumbledown but someone-still -lives-here feel. I was hesitant about using washes but dotted a few green glazes here and there on this model along with adding the flock and foliage clumps around the base. Less is more with this, obviously.

The window here has a sculpted rag curtain. This was just greenstuff painted brown. I added a little doormat back in the day, so I gave that detail some fresh paint. Just needs an empty milk bottle. 

This second model needed a roof replacement. I originally used the same technique on the roof as the previous model but the colours didn't gel. I went for slate grey instead like some of the other models in WD130. It is my preferred colour out of all of the examples I've tried out so far, but variety is the spice of life and all of that. I did little else to this model save a light white drybrush over the walls and the woodwork. Obviously, I added some fresh flock to the roof as well. 

You can see I've got a lot more adventurous with my colour choices now. The chimney pots are all made from the tubes that cover paint brushes when you buy them. I simply snipped them with a pair of kitchen scissors and painted them Terracotta, drybrushed them with Hobgoblin Orange and highlighted with Bleached Bone. 

I was in my stride by the time I started work on this third model. You'll see the original Warhammer Cottage is here and I just added an extension of my own devising. With hindsight, I should have made the roof slope down a little more but we can live with such imperfections. Perhaps the citizen of the Empire who built it was a shoddy builder? You might notice that I sculpted some greenstuff flagstones years ago and I kept them in place as a little bit of character detail. 

In my haste, I forgot to paint the edge of the plasticard black, sorry!

Finally, the big boy is finished. I think it was well over ten years in the making. But the double extended Warhammer Cottage is as of today finished. I'm most pleased with this one as my skills at painting houses has improved considerably. I am also really pleased with the tones on the wooden extension. This was really simple to achieve too. Bestial Brown, drybrushed over with Orc Brown, then Bleached Bone and a tickle of Skull White. The metalwork on all of the doors was just Mithril Silver washed over with a dark brown wash. 

Looking back, I've had some wonderful evenings bringing these models back to life. I hope you like them as much as I do. I'm certainly keen to try some of the other articles that Dave Andrews and Phil Lewis put out around this time. I am sure that many of you will be familiar with those projects. I wonder how many of you dear readers created your own Warhhamer Cottages back in 1990. Anyone have any fond memories of their own endeavours? 

I plan plenty more scenery pieces (they are much easier to build and paint than tiny 28mm minis) so if you are an expert in these matters and see any glaring mistakes that will only dawn on me in the months to come, please let me know. Any old scenery tips gratefully received. 

Those of you who love WHFRP first edition should have got the little joke I had with the title too. 

Until we next meet, 

Orlygg