The Geistenmunden Hills

It’s been a fair while between posts, over a month in fact! Over this period I’ve been on holidays and busy with work so haven’t had much time to get things painted, but I’ve still been chipping away in the background. Here’s something I’ve been working on for a little while: a set of terrain for the Geistenmunden Hills area of the Border Princes campaign map.

As you can see from the illustration, this is going to require some barrows! Luckily for me back over the Christmas break I’d ordered some terrain from https://www.fogoumodels.co.uk/ including a set of resin barrow entrances (well not so lucky, I ordered these for this very purpose!).

There are some other bits and bobs there that I’ll get to painting at some stage. Overall the quality of these models is excellent, the stone textures are really nice. I’d been waiting for an excuse to order from them for a while, and this was it!

Entrances are all well and good, but they need some burial mounds attached to them, and that’s what I busied myself at next. I took some photos of the process so I thought I’d make this post a bit of a tutorial.

I started by cutting some rough shapes out of MDF for the bases and matching smaller shapes out of insulation foam to make the main shape of the hills. I also cut a notch out of each of the hills to make the tunnels behind the entrances. You can see said notch in the smallest hill at the top of the pile. I then covered the undersides of my foam shapes with PVA glue and glued them down, and weighed them down with some small weights.

Next step was to put a roof on my hills. For this I used foamcore cut to match the hills. I also glued this down with PVA glue, but before I did this I painted my “tunnels” with some dark brown paint as I wasn’t going to be able to get to these once the entrances were glued on.

Once the glue was dry (read a few months later!) I carved my hills using a snap blade/retractable blade knife, with a special focus on making sure the entrances lined up neatly with my hills. For the big hill the entrance was taller than my foam assembly so I added some cork pieces to create a gradient to match the entrance. I used masking tape to patch any gaps, and glued the entrances down to the MDF using super glue (watch the foam doing this, super glue melts it!).

Following on from this I used Sculptamold (plaster with paper fiber mixed in) to cover the foam forms and blending in the entrances, taking care not to cover them up. This added some variation to the shapes and smoothed everything down, making them look much more like hills.

That’s it for the build side of things, now onto painting!

I don’t really have photos of the painting process apart from this one. I’m finding terrain has been a good fun way to get my son to join into the hobby side of things. He’s 3 and miniatures are a bit too small, but he’s fine getting some paint down on larger objects (including himself)!

Once the base colours were down, I gave the entrances a few drybrushes of greys and some green and brown washes to add a bit of colour in there. Once that was done I covered them using the flock mix I’ve been playing with for a while, a mix of Woodland Scenics foams and GW static grass.

Here are the finished barrows:

The Geistmunden Hills scenario calls for a piece of terrain to sit in the center of the board, and they suggest amongst other things a stone circle. This appealed to me, and I used some pine bark I had lying around to make an altar of sorts surrounded by standing stones. I painted these to match the stone of the barrows.

Overall here’s how these all fit on a 6ft x 4ft board:

These were lots of fun to put together, and I’m excited to use them in games. The motivation for these was this Warhammer campaign, but I can easily see using these for historicals or Middle-Earth games.

Until next time!

8 thoughts on “The Geistenmunden Hills

  1. Geistenmunden might be the most German sounding Warhammer location I’ve heard of! 🙂 The barrows look fantastic. A few years ago (probably more like 4-5) I had made plans to play The Old Forest scenarios from Fellowship of the Ring and what you made here is exactly what I was envisioning so I think you should definitely use them for LOTR one day. You don’t need many models painted to play the Old Forest scenarios either so hopefully that will motivate/tempt you further!

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    1. That’s interesting, I’ll definitely have to look that scenario up. I think there’s a fog on the barrow downs scenario I’ll have to play through as well, I even have the miniatures of the hobbits paralysed and shrouded by the wights somewhere in my pile of shame!

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      1. There are more Barrow Downs scenarios than you’d expect too. There’s a couple more in Scouring of the Shire (first edition, I believe) so you can get some additional usage out of it, if you want. Having those paralyzed hobbit minis is the hardest part so you’re well on your way! I even painted those up myself in the hopes of playing Fog on Barrow Downs one day 🙂

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      2. They are clearly creative and offbeat attempts to get more mileage out of the terrain and miniatures to a lesser extent but they looked fun to play all the same.

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