Unfortunately, a piece of the main roof
got chipped off in shipping. Normally I'd juts ask Randy for
another piece and he'd send me one, but, since I was running short on
time, I decided to deal with it. The first thing I did to the roof
was to curve the sides using a wood rasp. After the first side, I
decided to move to a chisel and then sandpaper. (The rasp was too
hard to control). The right side above has it's curve done.
One problem I thought the roof has was
that the small part on the left that stocks out over a small portion of
the building wasn't centered. I build asymmetrical stuff all the
time, but I really have this thing for symmetry. Anyway, I ended
up cutting off about 1/4" or more from the right side to make the roof
overhang even on both sides. Then I curved everything.
The front of the small section has been
sanded smooth and the piece to the right of it has been chiseled, but
not sanded.
This is my excellent wife Angela.
As time grew shorter (and I had already done the shingles on the tower)
I decided that she could do the main roof for me! For her first
foray into any kind of modeling she did an excellent job! Row upon
row of shingles were required on the main roof. it took a lot of
time. Once she had a side done, she'd trim the ends to match the
curve of the roof and then paint the shingles Dark Grey.
This was my solution for fixing the broken
piece. It was a little more complicated than I originally thought
it would be - but what isn't! I used a heavy weight paper to go
over the front and then the sides as well.
Here's the same section from the front.
The whole roof shingled and painted,
but no roof capping and no weathering.
\
Same deal, different view. The
entry is starting to look creepy!
This is the bottom after it was
finished. I sprayed the bottom black to start off with and then at
this point, went back and painted black acrylic around the outsides.
Here is the broken part from the
bottom.
The capping, which was construction paper
cut thin and painted is now on. I dry brushed the first side with
acrylic white.
To get around the tower, I took the
same flashing and did it inside out. A little cut here and there
and you can bend it around corners and down slanted rooftops.
Here's the left side with dry brushing.
The fence sections came from the kit -
and are Grandt Line I think. They were nice. I spray painted
them black and then again very lightly with rail brown. That made
a good base to brush on some chalk. The corner posts are wood on
the bottom that is carved on the sides and then painted with Concrete.
The top of the post is a square of styrene.
The gargoyle gets set in place.
Metal casting glued to styrene piece = hard to glue. White glue
didn't work and neither did CA. I think I ended up using two part
5 minute epoxy (which I hate). I can never seem to keep that stuff
off my hands. I think I did a great job and I get up to leave and
an Xacto knife is glued to my pinky.
As I mentioned, I wanted to keep
the roof removable so I could add interior and lighting later.
This is the final roof section with the tower glued in place.
And here is the building with the roof
off. I used some heavy wood to brace the corners inside. The
notch created by the lower center wall makes sure the tower sits right
in place and centers the roof out properly.
I think I did the bay window before the
door, but that's the next section anyway! I like to mix it up.
Let's go.....
On to the making the bay window!