29 March 2022

Zombie Shark 2: Basing Boogaloo

Say hi to Simon the zombie shark. Yes, I should have called him Bruce.

I bought and painted Simon back in August 2020, only two weeks before we left California for Vermont, but I never got around to basing him. He's been packed away for the past 2½ years but with my current project on hold thanks to PVA and greenstuff taking ages to dry, I decided it was about time I made him a base worthy of a zombified great white shark.

I had the base all planned out in my mind, and was going to use a walnut-sized stone I found while walking the dogs up the train tracks on their last morning in California...

...only to discover it's vanished. Great. There's about a billion stones on our drive but that means I have to do things like "put on shoes" and "leave the house" and "deal with snow" and that's just too complicated. So I decided to go in a different direction that would look good and allow me to remain warm.

I used one of the oval bases I bought for my Marsh Troll and some cork tile. After tearing off a piece of tile and making it a bit more ragged with a sculpting tool, I used superglue to stick it to the base and gave it a good 20 minutes to set properly. Once dry, it was taken to the garage and sprayed with grey primer, then brought back upstairs, covered in PVA and sprinkled with sand.

I kicked off by painting the sand with matte varnish to seal it before starting on the colours. As Simon's natural habitat is underwater, I wanted the sand to be darker than the usual desert base look, so I began with a coat of Tallarn Sand (I bought more GW paints thanks to the local games store doing a buy two, get one free offer). It was shaded with thinned Soft Tone and then given a drybrush with Karak Stone, and a lighter one with Ungor Flesh to give it a bit of yellow tone. 

The cork was given a coat of Mechanicus Standard Grey and a wash with homemade black wash, followed by highlights of Ash Grey, Bonewhite and Neutral Grey. A diluted wash of more black toned down and blended the highlights a bit.

I have some cheap plastic aquarium plants I picked up in Walmart, but there's so much flash on them I just can't even deal with it. So I used some red lichen I bought years ago to act as coral. I ripped off a couple of chunks and PVA'd them to the base. 

Then the issue of how to attach Simon raised its head. Luckily he already has a small hole in his underside from when I attached him to a cork to be painted, so I simply stuck a short length of paperclip into it and the other end into the cork. I didn't like how it looked, so I painted it Khorne Red and used another chunk of lichen to hide it. If I'd been thinking ahead I could have put a smaller piece of cork on top to disguise the wire, but this is me we're talking about. I can barely plan dinner, let alone a base.

I was happy with it but thought it could use another element or two. I rolled a small ball of greenstuff and made a starfish and a shell. They were glued to the base and painted, and ended up looking better than I thought considering I can barely sculpt a tentacle.

And no, Simon will not be making an appearance in Zombietown :-)

18 comments:

  1. I think the base has turned out really well Matt, and looks perfectly fitting for an underwater scene, your greenstuff additions have made it even more believable, as does the lichen as I've seen that exact colour red on coral.

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    1. Thanks, Dave, I was worried about whether the lichen would work but it turned out OK. I cannot tell you how shocked I am that I managed to make something recognizable out of greenstuff LOL!

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  2. Eeek! That's terrifying! What an impressive paintjob and awesome composition!

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    1. Cheers, Suber, I'm not that good at bases and find them a struggle so I appreciate that!

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  3. Super-stuff Matt. Great model (another to add to my Reapers Want List courtesy of your blog), and a terrific base too :-)

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    1. Thanks, Simon, I'm glad I could help put yet another dent in your wallet LOL!

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  4. That is one cool-looking undead shark! Nice job on the basing, too. I need to use cork sometime. The results are impressive!

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    1. Cheers, Keith! Cork works really well for this type of rocky base. I'm working on another one at the mo and should hopefully have it done soonish.

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  5. What a striking,if a little terrifying, model well set off by the base-work! I can't imagine what use you intended for it originally , but I'm sure it's a must buy in a lot of people's minds.

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    1. It's a pretty scary-looking monster, isn't it? Thanks, Joe! I just bought it to paint it as it's such a good model.

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  6. That base looks like a great fit for the model and I see no paperclip so no worries there either.

    The mini is a bit mad and I love it. As if a bloody great shark wasn't a scary enough prospect as is, let's go and make it even scarier by bringing it back to life after it's dead.

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    1. It's an insane model, Dai, and I love it! I wish Reaper did a zombie hammerhead too, I'd buy it :-)

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  7. Matt, Simon is absolutely fantastic, I'd gladly pay to have him on my shelf, love it!

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    1. Thanks, Justin! It's a really cool model and I'm well happy with how Simon and his base came out.

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  8. Bruce, I mean, Simon came out very well! ;) It is a pretty creepy sculpt if you ask me and I like the basing you settled on. If you want to get some rocks to use on bases, I recommend getting some cut up cork bits and using those instead of actual stones. Army Painter and Green Stuff World sell little tubs of them for under $10 (at least they were before inflation hit us all!). I've had mine for years and while I don't use them as much as I used to, they were more than worth the money I feel.

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    1. Cheers, Jeff! I do use cork for rocks, but I was just stuck on using that one stone I found in Cali LOL! I bought some 12"x12" cork tiles a couple of years ago and I have about nine left. But I guess I could walk the 50 feet to the drive at some point to get some real ones :-)

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  9. That is an awesome model! Looks like Jaws returned from the dead to extract revenge on Roy Schneider!

    Cheers Roger.

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    1. I think even Robert Shaw would have run a mile if he'd seen this shark, Roger! LOL!

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