The Galleon’s Graveyard: Dreadfleet Terrain

I’ve been busy building and painting a big unit for my Orcs and Goblins Old World army and needed a change of pace (read: a smaller project!). I had a look around my hobby room and my eyes stopped on my Dreadfleet box. I’ve used the game as a palette cleanser in the past (Back in April 2022!), and it delivered once again. At the pace I’m painting it I should expect to be able to play a game in 2040 or thereabouts.

Rather than paint more ships, this time I decided to tackle the terrain pieces in the box. These are nicely varied and hold a ton of detail given the scale they’re representing. They also had the advantage of being mostly rocks and therefore were nice and quick to paint, which fit my purposes perfectly.

Painting them was quite relaxing, and apart from painting the water, they were really straightforward. The water was an issue for two reasons: 1) unlike the ships which have separate bases, this terrain has the water attached and mixed into all that detail I was talking about before, and 2) I never wrote down how I painted the water the first time around!

Considering “the first time around” was close to two years ago I was preparing myself for some hard trial and error. However I got extremely lucky there, and as I was painting remembered how I’d done it, as well as picking the right paint to use on the first try. I am preparing for the next long break between painting this set this time, and writing things down! So here goes:

  • Rocks:
    1. VGA Dark Fleshtone [Airbrush] – All over
    2. VGA Beasty Brown [Airbrush] – In generous patches
    3. VGA Cold Grey [Airbrush] – Smaller patches, picked out some rocks entirely
    4. VMC Stone Grey [Drybrush] – All over
    5. MIG Panel Line Wash Deep Brown [Wash] – All over
    6. AK Slimy Grime Dark [Stipple] – On the base of the rocks to add green algae
  • Wood:
    1. VMC English Uniform [Basecoat]
    2. VMC Stone Grey [Drybrush] – All over
    3. MIG Panel Line Wash Deep Brown [Wash] – All over
    4. AK Slimy Grime Dark [Stipple] – On the base to add green algae
  • Sails:
    • VGC Black [Basecoat]
    • VMC Dark Sea Blue [Highlight]
  • Bones:
    • VGC Bonewhite [Basecoat]
    • MIG Panel Line Wash Deep Brown [Wash] – All over
    • VGC Bonewhite [Highlight]
    • AK Slimy Grime Dark [Stipple] – On the base to add green algae
  • Castle Walls:
    1. VGC Black [Basecoat]
    2. 50/50 AP Kraken Skin / VMC Dark Sea Blue [Line Highlight]
  • Castle Roof:
    • VMC Dark Sea Blue [Basecoat]
    • 70/30 AP Kraken Skin / VMC Dark Sea Blue [Line Highlight]
  • Lava:
    • PA Titanium White [Underpaint – Brush] – Painted the lava areas in pure white
    • VMA White [Underpaint – Airbrush] – Painted next to the lava areas to create a glow
    • VGA Moon Yellow [Airbrush] – Center of the lava areas
    • VGA Orange Fire [Airbrush] – Outer areas
    • VGA Gory Red [Highlight] – Picked out the raised areas to make “cold” lava crust
    • VMC Black [Highlight] – Picked out raised areas within the red
  • Water:
    1. Light Grey [Basecoat] – This was a mix to match the undercoat I used on the rest of the models in the set, a just off-white straying into grey.
    2. GW Contrast Akhelian Green [Contrast]
    3. VMC Light Sea Grey [Highlight]
    4. GW Contrast Akhelian Green [Contrast] – Slightly watered down
    5. VMC Light Sea Grey with a dash of GW Contrast Akhelian Green [Highlight]

Manufacturer codes: VGA – Vallejo Game Air, VMA – Vallejo Model Air, VMC – Vallejo Model Color, VGC – Vallejo Game Color, PA – ProAcryl, GW – Citadel/Games Workshop, AP – Army Painter, MIG – Ammo Mig, AK – AK Interactive

Here’s some detail shots of the terrain pieces. They’re all named in the rulebook so I’ve reproduced those in the captions.

Finally here’s a shot of the terrain with the ships I painted earlier. Really gives you an idea of the fantastical scale the game’s ships are!

It was nice to have a small project to tackle, gave me a sense of having accomplished something after a few months of working away at a bigger project without results I can show! What is true is that the pandemic days are truly over, I have to get used to hobby productivity levels that are much reduced when compared to the enforced downtime we had in the early 2020s. One thing I promised myself when I started this blog is that painting is meant to be my fun time, and should never feel like a chore. That means posting to the blog is secondary to that, and even if I feel it’s been too long between posts (which I’ve felt all of last year and this year), life and fun comes first, and I’m not going to make myself paint just to post something.

Sailing on the High Seas, Sweltering in the Desert

This week saw me paint a few odd things, starting with a sudden urge to paint models from Dreadfleet, a 10 and a bit year old standalone naval game from Games Workshop, set in the old Warhammer universe. I bought my set upon release, built all the models and then never painted any. Never too late to get to that though, just had to wait for inspiration to strike! There are quite a few ships and its of terrain in the game, so plenty more to paint before I can call it done, hopefully I won’t wait 10 years to paint the next batch!

Grimnir’s Thunder

First up we have Grimnir’s Thunder, the dwarven ship. Some ships in the game have small pieces they can send out, and in this case this is a dirigeable. You can barely see another ready to launch peeking out of the deck.

Seadrake

The second one I tackled was Seadrake, the high elf ship. This one has dragons!

These are very cool models, if a bit challenging to paint as they have a lot of overlapping pieces and are a smaller scale than I’m used to painting. They have however been quite enjoyable to paint! The mat that comes with the game also provides a really nice backdrop for photos!

This week also marked my first foray into painting terrain for my North Africa WW2 project, with these two houses. I printed these on my 3d printer (you can find the files I used here) and based them on pieces of MDF. The palm tree is a cheap plastic model I found on eBay. I have a whole batch of these so expect to see them on other terrain pieces in the future!

I painted them with craft paints using a series of progressively brighter dry brushes, nothing fancy but it looks ok.

I used a lot of cream grout to make the sand on the base. This ended up being far too bright for my desert mat so I airbrushed some warmer tones to get it closer to where it needed to be. It’s quite a bit brighter but looks reasonable to me now.

As a parting note I played in a Star Wars Legion tournament over the weekend with my Galactic Empire army. This was my first attempt at playing the game (nothing quite like diving in head first!), and I really enjoyed myself. I didn’t do particularly well (won one of my three games so not all bad!), but I did manage to leave with the best painted army award so am happy with that!