The final piece for the McPherson farm is the famous bank barn.
The research for this was much simpler than that for the farm house. Since it still stands today there are plenty of images available on the internet and I have found plans of it.
However, I must admit that I struggled with this model. It is one of the biggest I have made in a long time and in its raw shell looked too big even when scaled back even though when I stood a 28mm figure beside it the scaling was correct. The thought of those two large stone areas was daunting - stone wall construction is quite an intense task and needs to be completed within two hour before the stuff sets and if you do it in stages, it shows. But far more daunting was that HUGE roof area. So I worked this model bit by bit, uncertain how it was going to look at the end. Not until it was grassed did the model look right.
A bank barn is, of course dug into a bank, in this case it was dug into the eastern slope of McPherson's ridge, just past the crest. For a standalone piece like this the bank has to be artificial.
So here it is.
The western face as Archer's, then later Brockenborough's, Confederates would gave seen it as they advanced up the Chambersburg Pike.
The northern face.
The eastern face
The southern face
Finally here is the whole McPherson farm buildings set that will appear on the Buildings for Sale page (LINK) in a day of so.























Another masterpiece, Mark! Exquisite modeling. I love the whole farmstead complex.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jonathan. I need to plan a game to use it.
DeleteIt is a fantastic looking model once again Mark. I think part of the problem is we have all become accustomed to the anesthetics of scaled down buildings...I remember when I first saw the "new" mdf buildings I thought they looked enormous....but actually, they are just true scale!
ReplyDeleteI have thought the same about trees often....I look around the local park and many trees look to be 8 to 12 times the height of a person, which would make a 28mm scale trees approx 240 to 360mm in height....but mostly, they are about 100 to 200mm on our tables...
I actually prefer the buildings around 200x100, but this barn needed to be more authentic.
DeleteBack in the late 80s we bought a job lot of model railway trees, most of them 200mm or greater. We couldn't sell them because they were viewed as too tall...that's why we have such a large collection of tall trees! In many ways 100-150mm tall is more practical...you don't get tangled in them so easily.
Superb piece of modelling Mark, very nicely done. Looks great on the table.
ReplyDeleteThanks Donnie.
DeleteWhat a fantastic looking farm complex.
ReplyDeleteThanks. It came together in the end...
DeleteMagnificent stuff, and very impressive when all three buildings are arranged together. Great to see you make the final push and finish the barn. Very annoying how you have to go hunting for posts now with Google delaying updates for days. They must surely be getting flooded with complaints, but curiously not much about it online that I can see.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lawrence. Yes the post display delay is annoying... this one took about 24 hours to appear.
DeleteAnother masterpiece work Mark!
ReplyDeleteThank you Michal.
DeleteSuperb work once again Mark:)! Here in the UK your post took 24 hours to appear in my feed, after others had already appeared despite being posted later.
ReplyDeleteThanks Steve. I read somewhere that the international time setting could be part of the problem...makes some sort of sense because we are GMT +12...but doesn't answer the 24 hour delay...
DeleteMark,
ReplyDeleteVery nice set with all three buildings. Definitely are great add's to any table. The couple of modifications for style and functionality blend in nicely with the aesthetic you have made. You definitely have captured the weathered look of old leaded white paint.
Joe
Thanks Joe. It is a significant build. I wonder if the first thing I am asked when this appears on the table is ..."how many units can fit inside?"...
DeleteTerrific work. If you want a game of mamageable size why not a one-sided fight inspired by Hogoumont fifty years later with a small but gallant defence and a large overcommitment by the eager attackers. Results could be based on how many assailants fall before he farm is overun or have it hold out a fixed number of turns. If that's too European an inspiration there was a thing called the Alamo.
ReplyDeleteThanks again for sharing another inspiring project.
Stephen
Thanks Stephen. There is a game planned...
DeleteOnce again your model outdoes the original. They look so, so grand on the table with some figs too.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes, James
Thanks James.
Delete