Monday, 24 November 2025

Creating Flat Miniatures





I start making my flat miniatures by making sketches in a book. These are a combination of ideas from my own head, or ideas from other miniature manufacturers, see the list later. These are all ideas  for my DnD campaign set in Ghastminster which I may be revisiting next year.


Some of my drawings never get past this stage because I lose interest or because I don't like them, but others get to be developed into physical miniatures eventually. 
This is not a quick process and takes me ages to complete. I often get stuck at a point and have to revisit at a later date.


At this stage I  am  not always drawing to scale, although most medium size creatures /monsters are, as I have  a 30 mm template I use to get the proportions right.


Some ideas are huge.


I mostly try to create pages of flats that have many of useful figures, as opposed to just one or two, although that is unavoidable at times. I started trying to draw them at 15 mm scale but I found that I got far more detail at 30 mm and I could use them in a variety of different games.



So after the initial sketches are done, I progress onto organising my drawings onto an A4 sheet of paper.


Here is a sheet I worked on recently to create Roman troops, with their allies that I could use for two separate uses. Primarily these are going to be printed up at 33% and used as 10 mm flats.
However I also use  them as random models at 30 mm for use in roleplay, they'll make some lovely guards or barbarian adversaries. 


After drawing them in pencil, at the right size, I fold the page in two and use a light board to trace the outer image, which I can later fill in with pencil. Then I work over the lot in ink, using Pilot or Uni-ball pens or something similar. Finally I thicken all the outer lines and emphasize some others as I see fit. 


Finally I photocopy the black and white version and colour it. I never colour the original just in case I cock it up or I don't like the colours I chose. Sometimes I use acrylics and paint them, but recently I bought some reasonably nice pens and used them instead, as with these below.


Here we have Legionaries, Spanish infantry, Numidian light infantry and Gallic infantry.
I tend to colour the reverse side at the same time so as not to get myself in a mess.


These can then be colour photocopied, cut, glued to black card and based, ready for use in a game.
Next post I will show some of these in 10 mm based up for Warmaster type games.

Influences include: Games Workshop, Foundry Miniatures, North Star Military Models, D&D Dungeon Masters Book, there will be many more ideas that have seeped into my head but can't recall them all.



Thursday, 13 November 2025

Goblin 3mm Army



This is my handmade 3mm Goblin army that I have used to play Fantastic Battles on several occasions...but all solo occasions. Another story for another time.


There are a variety of goblin  troop types, lets explore them quickly. 


There are wolf riders, axemen and battlewagon companies above.
Below we have a general on a fantastic beast, the big spider, trolls, warriors and spider riders.



Below the battlewagons is a Hero miniature.



The spider riders look more like frogs TBH.


Bat riders and a second Hero miniature.
May need to repaint the bat riders, they are not really doing it for me now I see them pictured here.



Spearmen and a shaman.


Wolf riders and axemen again.


Trolls and goblin warriors and their general.


These are all made from cereal packet card in the manner I described in last months post. They are on 25 mm card bases (cereal card again, layered up) and all the troop strips are 15 mm long, so they sit nicely on their base. Fantastic battles uses 40 mm bases, but as my troops are so small I decided to take liberties.