Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Klarg the Bugbear

With a slight modification of the goblin instructions, I also built the boss for the first chapter of Lost Mine of Phandelver, the bugbear Klarg. I made the head similar to the go
blin heads, but bigger, and in a teardrop shape rather than a sphere. I cut off the narrow end of the teardrop before baking to make the flattened face of the bugbear.

I made the body and neck as described in the previous instructions, then cut two pieces of pipe cleaner and formed each into a U-shape. I used hot glue to affix both to the back and sides of the body. I cut down the upper pipe cleaner to form the arms, then added hands made from dabs of hot glue and glued on a club made from a broken wooden skewer. I bent the longer bottom pipecleaner section forward then down and made legs and feet. I lightly painted the pipecleaners brown and the body in a black leather.

I added a black kilt/loincloth to cover the odd joining of the legs with the body, making it out of paper mache like the cape. The cape itself I made a bit larger than the goblin capes. I used a 1.5-in washer for the base and again glued down sawdust, then painted it black with a tan drybrush overcoat to simulate a straw-covered floor.

Monday, March 4, 2019

Goblins!

To start my Lost Mines adventure, I need plenty of goblins, and I needed to make them cheaply. I took inspiration from the simple lines of the goblins in the D&D comic Order of the Stick. The red-cloaked lieutenant is also inspired by the same comic.

I bought a box of wooden pushpins in the office supplies aisle of my local grocery store for under $3. Plastic pushpins could be okay, but may be more difficult to work with. A standard pushpin has a dome-shaped protrusion near the pin, a cylindrical shaft, and a smaller reversed dome at the end away from the pin. For our model, the pin will form the neck, the large protrusion will form the shoulders, the shaft will form the torso, and the small protrusion will form the feet.

The head will be made from clay, but sculpting tools are not needed for this model. We'll use papier-mâché to make the cloak. The base is a disc about the size of a U.S. penny. The cheapest discs I could find cost over 1 cent, so I just used a penny.

Instructions

Supplies:
Map-style pushpin (I used wooden pushpins)
Polymer clay
Wood file or whittling knife
Wire cutter
Paper bag or any paper
Scissors
White glue
Superglue
A penny or similar-sized disc
Acrylic paint and fine paintbrush

  1. Take a pushpin and cut off all but 2-3 mm of the pin using a wire cutter. Using a knife or wood file, cut down the larger protrusion around the pin on two parallel sides until it is even with the shaft of the pin. The cut sides will be the chest and back; the uncut sides will be the shoulders. On the sides not cut, cut or file down the smaller protrusions even with the shaft, leaving the protrusion to front to form the feet.
  2. Form the head out of a tiny ball of clay. Look at another miniature to gauge the size of a head. Put the head down on the neck to form the neck-hole, then reshape the head to your preference. With a separate piece of clay, flatten and cut our two
    tiny triangles to form the ears. Press the triangles to the side and back of the head. Remove the head from the pin and bake according to the package directions to harden. Sand down any seams where the ears meet the head.
  3. Paint the body and head. I went with brown for the body, green for the feet and head. I used two different shades of green to distinguish different goblins.
  4. Superglue the body to the base. If you use a penny as the base, add extra superglue to cover the raised engravings on the penny, then sprinkle baking soda, salt, fine sand, or sawdust on the superglue to give it a rough texture. Paint the base a ground color.
  5. On a paper bag or piece of paper, draw a circle about 1.25 in (3 cm) in diameter. I traced a plastic soda cap as my template. Draw a dot in the center. Draw a pie
    piece of about 1/4th of the circle. Poke the pin part of your pushpin through the center dot. Draw a line where the chest of your pushpin figure intersects the pie piece. Cut out the pie piece up to the tip where you drew this line.
  6. Make a thin paste of 2 parts white glue and 1 part water. Dip your paper cloak into the paste and then arrange over the body with a toothpick. Make folds with the front of the cloak to suggest arms under the cloak. 
  7. Add a dot of superglue to the pin and put the head onto the body. Draw a face on the goblin with a fine brush or a  extra-fine tipped Sharpie and white-out.
  8. Optional: Use spray polyurethane in a flat finish to coat the figure in a protective layer.

Saturday, March 2, 2019

There goes my hero

For my player characters, I bought the WizKids D&D Icons of the Realm Starter Set. The minis are okay. The paint jobs are a bit sloppy in places, the rubbery plastic that they're sculpted in makes some parts bent, and at around $15 for 6 they're on the higher end of what I was wanting to pay per mini (for the cheapskate minis blog, I'm trying to stay under $2 per figure).

The wizard, the cleric, and the bow fighter or ranger
The druid, the rogue and the axe fighter.

However I'm happy with my purchase for three reasons:

  1. Five of the characters depicted in the minis line up exactly with the described pre-generated characters in the Lost Mines adventure. If you're DM'ing for newbies, it's easier to ask, "Hey you want to be this guy with the axe or this lady with the fire?" rather than jumping into class jargon right away. The sixth mini, the druid, isn't one of the PC options, but there's a NPC druid later in the adventure that is calling his name.
  2. The minis are made out of a rubbery plastic that seems very durable. These guys are something you could let a kid or clumsy adult play with and not have to worry about your precious paint job.
  3. As I'm crafting my own minis for this adventure, it's good to have some ready-made minis to judge size and proportion. This set gives a few human-sized characters along with a dwarf and a halfling, so I can more easily judge how big to make, for example, the head of a goblin.

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Setting off for the Lost Mine of Phandelver

Welcome! I started this blog to chronicle my efforts to run the Dungeons & Dragons Starter set Lost Mines of Phandelver on as tight of a budget as possible. The initial investment of the starter set is pretty low; when I bought it, it was priced at under $10 on Amazon or Target. Now, it's up to around $16, but it's still a good deal. That price includes the adventure, a basic set of rules, a full set of dice, and pre-generated character sheets.

Many of the encounters can be done with imagination (so-called "Theatre of the Mind") or by using paper cutout minis. I wanted to have three-dimensional minis, so I'll be putting in some more effort. Please leave comments if you have suggestions or ideas, but I already have most of this adventure planned out.