The little farm in the center is a 30x40 base.
You can see the chalk palate in the pictures that follow. Put in a stream just for kicks to see how it would look, and a couple of fields. I did come across a blog that by chance developed a technique of making game mats. They really are small, see the picture below with their bigger cousin. With the arrival of my 3D printer I could realise my ambition, so here are my reinforcements. Find this Pin and more on Scenery by Model Railroad Academy. For me, the time to put into making that terrain just isnt an option. I have had a single tankette for years and always hoped to acquire a couple more, but never managed to find any affordable one. Then paint base - mine painted with acrylic raw umber. Once dry, coat the base in PVA and add sand, grit and ballast.
Glue the field perimeter to a hardboard base. Description "Done some more work on my teddy bear terrain tiles, it will be a general purpose board for all eras and genres, designed to fit 15mm-28mm, have shaved the dirt roads out with clippers, reduced the tyre ruts down with a long necked bbq lighter, I'll glue sand into the tyre ruts and paint brown, the long brown/white stripe on the right will be a river, I plan on filling it with clear resin after detailing the river bed, and will be shaping the grass in differant areas, and colouring it various greens/yellows/browns, I need to make more tiles with a single end to end road, have done enough t/y/x intersection, and will do more farming and plain fields, as well as some scatter hills and other terrain, plan on train tracks, houses to suit Russian, Normandy and some fantasy/Medieval buildings and a bridge accross the river as well as some shallow river crossings." Publication Date 3 April 2021 Link /2021/04/wip-teddy-bear-terrain-tiles. Following on from the Wheat Fields that I made last week I decided to make a few fields of vegetable crops for my wargames terrain collecti. Using a sharp blade cut out the fields and an inside square.