In what is the final post of my holiday-driven burst of activity we have quite a few trees!
As I’ve mentioned a few times in the last few posts, I’m planning on running a game of Chain of Command for some friends in the coming weeks, and the setting is the Eastern Front, sometime in winter 1944. Having no winter terrain was going to make that a bit difficult, so I decided to paint up a few pieces to populate the table. The main thing I wanted was to have some nice pine forests, so I set about finding some suitable trees.

The trees you see above were cheap ones from Amazon which came in big batches with some variety in sizes which was quite nice. 60 of them cost me just below $60 (Australian dollars that is!) which seemed like a nice rate. They are a basic shaped and flocked bottlebrush style pine trees, nothing fancy but they do the trick. The flock was not glued on great but I knew I was going to spray them with varnish to get some snow on there too so was not too worried. The “trunks” of the trees were bare wire twists so I needed to make some holders for them, to make the trees more realistic and allow them to be removed for gaming and storage purposes.

I made a very rough trunk shape in tinkercad and 3D printed the 60 I needed. I then glued them down in a semi-random pattern to some MDF bases I cut out of the back of an old bookshelf (never throw anything away!), and was ready for basing.

I wanted a forest floor look but wanted to stay away from a leafy look as befits a pine forest. As a result while I went my usual route of blending up some leaf litter as I did for these citadel woods and for my endor table I stayed away from soft leaves (european style!) and went for dried eucalyptus leaves which are much harder and blend down to a powder. That mixed with small twigs gave a nice finish that I think does a decent job of impersonating dropped branches and bark at the scale.

To finish the look I added some green foam from woodland scenics to represent small vegetation on the forest floor. I tried adding some dark and some dry static grass to look like dropped needles, but I don’t think they’re very visible. To top it off I sprinkled some snow flock over the trees and bases (over wet hairspray), then sealed the lot with some spray varnish.

Keeping the trees removable is quite practical for gaming purposes, especially for those game systems that treat forests slightly abstractly as an area of terrain rather than individual trees.

The trees make up most of the terrain I needed ready for this game as you can see from the layout I set up above. You get a sneak preview of the remainder of the terrain which is the large house in the left corner and the two small bunkers to the right.
You also get to see my attempts at repurposing my old Citadel grass mat, which has sat unused for years since I’ve move on to printed neoprene battlemats. It seemed a waste to not use it, so I decided to see if I could convert it for this cold setting. I hit it with patches of brown and white and then “frosted” it with a light pass of white spray paint to get that frozen grass look.
I wanted the table to have a frosty morning with some light snow look rather than a full on snow storm, hence the light use of snow flock on the forests and the light dusting of white on the mat. I’m hoping to communicate the cold through the mat and the tree stands only, allowing me to place terrain pieces I painted for my other settings over it and having them not look out of place. For example I’m planning on using the cobblestone road I painted for my Normandy games in this game as you can see above.
I hope you like the look of these, and I’ll be likely back onto my slower pace of posts as I head back to work next week!
These look really good, Nic! 🙂 The bases definitely have the look of pine forest to me (have to reach way back in my memory here) and overall they look spot on! Nice re-purposing of the mat as well!
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Thanks John! I’m also drawing from my memory, not too many pine forests in Australia, but I’ve seen quite a few in my time in Europe. Saying that there is a pine plantation about 40minutes from my house but I didn’t feel the need to refresh my memory enough to go take a look!
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Nice work on the trees. They look realistic. Lived near Mt Gambier for a while with all of their pine plantations so I have a smidgen of knowledge.
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Thanks! Glad to hear they look the part!
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Trees are trickier in our hobby than people expect or at least that has been my experience. I made some for MESBG a few years ago and I ran into some trouble with them. I like how you took those pine trees and repurposed them. That sounds much easier to completely and its very visually effective too! I love the basing for the trees as well. That really brings the forest and snow to life nicely!
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Thanks Jeff! Glad you like them. The forests in Lotr have always been inspirations for my wargaming terrain (Mirkwood, Lorien, Fangorn) so I’ve always been a fan of building them (and playing MESBG games on heavily forested boards!)
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Being able to make trees and natural terrain is very important in MESBG for sure. I dreamed of doing that for a year or two and then when I actually tried to make the trees, my abilities fell short. I wasn’t happy with what I made and that was a determining factor in trying Fallout and leaving MESBG behind.
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They look great! The bases are really effective with the wooden ground litter as well – something to rip off as you don’t usually see that lack of grass that you get under where trees block out the sunlight.
I’ve also got a box of trees that I picked up from eBay or Amazon some time ago – like you, I didn’t get any bases with them but unlike you, I didn’t have a printer (and still don’t have the skills to model them). You should put those up somewhere – I know I’d download & print them!
I didn’t realise you were in AU – I thought you were in Singapore/SEA for some reason!
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Thanks a lot! Yep I’m over in WA. Happy to share the model, I uploaded it here https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/game/tree-stump-for-hobby-wire-trees it’s not particularly pretty but it does the job!
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Cheers! Just grabbed the file now!
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