Saturday, 1 November 2025

Making some Sci-Fi Terrain

This week’s modelling has focused on scratch-building and kit-bashing additions for my Star Wars collection. Earlier in the week I kit-bashed a dinosaur from the discount shop with a mounted figure from my spare parts box (see previous post).  While I had been rummaging through my spares collection, I came across a collection of old seedpods I had collected years ago on one of my walks. I am always on the lookout for items that could be used as terrain. So it seemed timely to add to my Sci-Fi terrain collection.

Additional terrain made from seedpods.

At first, I planned to simply trim the bases so they would sit flat on the tabletop, but they looked a bit dull and boring. To give them more character, and to better match my retro-style sci-fi terrain, I decided to apply some washes and use some dry brushing to highlight their shapes.

The seedpod brown colour was uninspiring and boring.

I cut the bases off the seedpods to make them sit flat.

For the washes, I used watered-down craft acrylics applied liberally with a brush. Once dry, I then dry brushed them with my regular model paints. There were two types of seedpods to work with. One set was washed in blue, dry brushed in light blue, and finished with touches of dark red around the openings to give them a look of a carnivorous plant. The second set was washed in red and dry brushed with yellow, producing a spiky cactus look.

The blue carnivorous plant life.

The red looking cactus.

These new pieces will add some more colour to the tabletop and can double as dangerous terrain when a scenario calls for it. I will most likely be using the blue, carnivorous-looking plants for that particular role.


I couldn’t resist getting these new additions on to the tabletop and play a few solo Star Wars games using the Squad Hammer Core rules from Nordic Weasel Games.

16 comments:

  1. Great additions to your terrain. They look superb.

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    1. Thanks. They were surprisingly quick and easy to make.

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  2. More terrain is always good.
    I don’t know what the plants are like in NZ but if there are any plants almost in bud perhaps you could include some (that way you have potential jeopardy - will it sprout harmlessly, or is it somehow dangerous?).
    Cheers,
    Geoff

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    1. Having terrain options is always useful when lying out the tabletop. I am not sure where and when I picked these up, I do know they have been packed away for more than a decade or more and are well and truely dried out.

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  3. Very resourceful additions to your terrain box.

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    1. They are nice and easy to pack away, another consideration nowadays as storage becomes a constraint.

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  4. Once again very inventive ideas create an excellent outcome Peter. I have also occasionally picked up twigs and small branches etc when out on walks for later use on the wargames table.... I imagine we are not alone, either!

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    1. It is always a bonus to find something on a walk that can be repurposed for a wargame.

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  5. Those look very effective Peter and suitably alien too:). I'm terrible at always spotting things on walks that might be of use for terrain in my games!

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    1. Thanks. They certainly give off an alien vibe on the tabletop.

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  6. Great looking plants Peter. I have used Banksia seed pods and some other large gumnuts as man eating plants for 40k terrain.
    I think that seed pods from Australasia don't have the European look that we associate with earth like plants.

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    1. The Banksias would be good. Do you paint them up, or just leave them their natural colours?

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  7. Very nice work on them, they certainly look very alien and look great on the table as does the dinosaur from the previous post, super!

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