Wednesday 4 September 2013

Chaos Lord of Nurgle on Chariot

I had this idea for a Chaos Lord of Nurgle on a Chariot of Chaos years back (I think this was during the Storm of Chaos campaign) and I managed to acquire all the parts of it. This included parts from the old Nurgle palanquin, wheels from the old Skaven Doomwheel and other miscellaneous parts.  However I never knew how to actually have it all stay together as I had pinned the wheels onto a beastmen chariot chassis and it would wobble. It was only until I was told that I could use plasticard shaped as a girder to keep it all together that I was able to complete it last year:









The only problem is that its not WISYWIG as there ain't an extra Chaos Warrior on the chariot but fuck y'all!

Night Lords Bikes

(I posted up these bad boys in another page but am changing things around so that people can see the end results of my models in a dedicated page to the army that I am collecting.)

I bought the Dark Vengeance box set a while back as I loved the look of the chaos models and I wanted to be able to use most of the models for an army. I wanted chaos bikers for my army and had to come up with a nifty way to convert the Ravenwing bikes into a Chaos Space Marine Biker. So first off I removed all the stinking Dark Angel heraldry from the bikes, the heads and shoulder pads with my trusty knife. At no point did the knife slip and went into my finger. Honest.

Then to cover up the scratch marks on the fuel tanker on the bike I sculpted a rib cage onto it (make it more chaosy) along with spikes/ body parts/ mini face to the front of the wheel. To get rid of the wings from the front of the bike I decided to cover them up with green stuff and then extending the front with plasticard, reinforcing it with green stuff. After that I began making the bat wings staring with the ridges for the wings, making a base outline first and, after drying, added more to any crevices that were missed. Green stuff was then added in between the wings, using the sculpting tool to gently scratch it to give it an organic look.

Here are the final results below: