Thank you so much for this! A very clear and well explained tutorial. I had been trying to figure out a way to do a palisade for my celts for ages, and somehow never thought of using chopsticks. Lot of people collect twigs, but that seemed really laborious, this is much more reasonable!
Glad the tutorial comes uselful to you! Yeah this should do fine for Celts, Gaulish and celtic/later Iron age fortifications were my main influence for this. Also with this modular system you can either make a small palissade or a higher one et on walls, I also made sure the height of the pallisade was compatible with the modular hills i made so you can also use it to represent a wide soil backing as was ofter used behind Celt fortifications.
@@LandvaettrsLair Yes, it is really well designed in that regard. I was going to use a wide soil backing as that is what I am most familiar with from Irish Ringforts. I immediately ran out to my local asian supermarket to get a massive pile of chopsticks, my wife was very amused!
@@johnnybigbones4955 Awesome. I need to buy some too! I ran out of chopsticks before completing the whole set and it's been nagging at me lately. Good news if you use a soil backing you'll be done pretty fast since the walkway is clearly the most tedious and time consuming component of this craft.
I would like to see your interpretation of European monolithic structures perhaps with a fantasy or low fantasy twist. You have a creative approach to the craft keep it up.
wow incredible work man. also the paint job is perfect. i appreciated that you research the right color and not throw the horrible black coat that everyone does on rocks.
Thanks ! Well i Guess it depends on what you're going for. Doing a dark stonejob seems pretty relevant if your going for some fantasy evil castle. But yeah if you want a more realistic approach limestone should defenetly be considered!
Great work, as usual! I really like your style and I will be trying my best to replicate your sandstone style. I've already made a few weapon racks with some success. I am blending a number of people's style that I watch on UA-cam. When I get to stone work, I'll use your style. I'll be looking forward to the next build.
Thanks ! In this tutorial i unfortunately forgot to show/mention i also did a drybrush of white over the salmon midtones of the stonework. But i did show it in other vid!
Great job ! Super boulot. Tu as plusieurs tutos excellents dont je m'inspire pour ma propre table pour le jeu Briskars - j'attends tes prochains tutos avec impatience !
Merci! Content que mon contenu te soit utile. Les tutos ça traine un peu en ce moment a cause du taf mais il devrait y en avoir un nouveau dans pas longtemps je l'ai entamé il y a deux semaines...
1 dislike think that's your Chinese restaurant owner. You number 10 customer always ask for many chopsticks. Looks great Landva you always very interesting builds.
Thanks Chris. Lol probably, we mosty order japanese though but hey they offer up to 4 chopsticks free of charge i only ask for what is already available. 😉 however building an actual set of modular palissade will surely ask a lot more of them. Buying them in bulk will most certains come cheaper!
@@LandvaettrsLair I have a hard time remembering how to spell your name when telling someone about your channel. You and Max DM have the greatest accents of game crafters and are some out the most interesting builders on here.
@@AlexBabcock-hw9iz yeah defenetly isn't the most advertising-wise name for a Channel. Maybe I should rename it but for now i like it, it's original I guess. If you remembered Landva just needs to add "ettr" 😉 thanks for your support!
This tutorial was excatly what I needed for my upcoming tapletop RPG night. The palisade is sturdy, detailed and looks great. One question: What was the thickness of foam you measured for the wall walks? Inch or more? Also, thanks for the painting tips!
Sorry for the late reply. The catwalk needs to be at least larger than a miniature base but overall thicknesses is up to you. I'd say the wall was 2.5- 3 cm thick.
Lovely work! I like your palisades better than mine! As an aside, I don't know how it's said in French, but in English, we usually pronounce "Celts" as "Kelts" not "Selts." The exception is Boston's basketball team: the Celtics (said as Seltics.) Historians invariably use the K sound.
Thanks! These are from fireforge games miniatures. They're meant for wargaming and are plastic so are pretty affordable and look historic for XIVth-XVth century mean at arms.
Excellent tutorial, the miniatures that appear in this video and in the previous ones of which brand they are? Excellent tutoriel, les miniatures qui apparaissent dans cette vidéo et dans les précédentes de quelle marque sont-elles?
Merci, de mémoire c'est plutôt Celte ou Gallo-Romain, en tout cas c'est les cultures dont j'ai tiré mes sources. Mais les palissades se retrouvaient bien sûr dans les mottes castrales du haut moyen age, le soutènement était parfois absent ou constitué d'un remblai de terre pour les citadelles danoises par exemple. A ma connaissance ce type de soutènement d'est pas sourcé pour cette époque mais on reste dans la même logique de soutènement, de chemin de ronde et d'économie des matériaux, et puis en ce qui me concerne ça reste pour du jeu de rôle ;).
ah, ces tuto sont vraiment de qualité, merci! Question mega bête: comment on appelle de la colle PVC en France? t'achètes ça où à Paris? Moi j'utilise toujours de la colle à bois...
@@amdnable heh après je viens d'acheter la bouteille hein j'utilisait autre chose avant donc je sais pas si c'est le must, mais a priori ça a fonctionné pour tenir les cure-dents!
@@LandvaettrsLair il n’y aura plus d’autres tuto? Ceux sur le navire viking les palissades en plessis et les palissades modulables sont des masterclass
Merci Paul! Il n'y aura plus de tutos extensifs comme ces derniers, qui demandaient beaucoup de travail de montage. Je n'ai plus autant de temps devant moi et il faut savoir prioriser. Néanmoins j'envisage des formats courts sans montage de 5 minutes du type "short tips" ainsi que des vidéos sporadiques de démonstration ou je montre des créations abouties de type diorama et ou j'illlustre processus de fabrication, dans ses grandes lignes. Dès que j'aurais un peu de temps! En attendant si tu es sur Instagram tu peux my suivre jy suis un peu plus actif! instagram.com/landvaettr
Ain't silly at all! Yes you could, I thought about it but it wasn't suiting to my chopsticks since they were mostly made out of hard bamboo with an eliptic section. But if you're using softer wood it can defenetly be an option to start removing most of the matter before scoring...
Why did you take the effort to do toothpicks on both sides of the walk wall if one is going to go against the vertical logs of the palisade so they won't be visible?
explained that at the beginning of the vid on the thatched roof if I remember correctly. But there are many other ways to do it... ua-cam.com/video/gM7izZHEyEU/v-deo.html
What is the ratio of dark umber to modge podge? I've never used modge podge before and have not been able to find how much of the modge podge to add to the paint.
If your craftpaint is acrylic you can mix a ratio of 1/3 modpoge to paint, you can go up to 50/50. Depends how sturdy you want your piece, you will eventually loose details if you use too much also modge podge isnt cheap. If the paint is gouache gotta go for a 50/50 mix regardless though... hope this helped
Fireforge games miniatures. There meant for wargaming and come on boxes of twenty or so. Pretty affordable and also looks historical. However they are slightly smaller than most 28mm miniatures. Not totally off scale but they defenetly look like short men. I usually stick them on a thicker base and mostly use them as genereric soldiers.
Yes you could, but it wasn't suiting my chopsticks since they were mostly made out of hard bamboo with an eliptic section. But if you're using softer wood it can defenetly be an option to start removing most of the matter before scoring...
Just going through, and re-watching these. You've really got a great esthetic sir!
This video really should have had 500,000 view. I've referred back to numerous times. Quality workmanship!
Thanks man, much appreciated! Cheers!
Great build. Never seen the toothpicks used as packing material for the wall it looked great.
Thanks!
Thank you so much for this! A very clear and well explained tutorial. I had been trying to figure out a way to do a palisade for my celts for ages, and somehow never thought of using chopsticks. Lot of people collect twigs, but that seemed really laborious, this is much more reasonable!
Glad the tutorial comes uselful to you! Yeah this should do fine for Celts, Gaulish and celtic/later Iron age fortifications were my main influence for this. Also with this modular system you can either make a small palissade or a higher one et on walls, I also made sure the height of the pallisade was compatible with the modular hills i made so you can also use it to represent a wide soil backing as was ofter used behind Celt fortifications.
@@LandvaettrsLair Yes, it is really well designed in that regard. I was going to use a wide soil backing as that is what I am most familiar with from Irish Ringforts. I immediately ran out to my local asian supermarket to get a massive pile of chopsticks, my wife was very amused!
@@johnnybigbones4955 Awesome. I need to buy some too! I ran out of chopsticks before completing the whole set and it's been nagging at me lately. Good news if you use a soil backing you'll be done pretty fast since the walkway is clearly the most tedious and time consuming component of this craft.
I know it's an old vid but just found your channel and this is exactly what I needed thank you
Glad this was helpful nonetheless! Cheers!
Looks awesome man
Thanks!
Excellent technique and easy to follow tutorial. Thank you! Turned out really nice.
Thanks for the feedback! Glad you liked!
Looking great sir, the wattle reinforcement certainly helps with the look of the wall base.
Thanks!
Love that intro, and great job on the project tutorial, keep it up with the innovative builds.
Thanks! I shall do my best :D
hehe, i've been planning my own modular castle system, definitely adding this to my play list of project stuff :)
Awesome - love it!
That intro was 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥!!!!
Thanks glad I found the idea XD
I would like to see your interpretation of European monolithic structures perhaps with a fantasy or low fantasy twist. You have a creative approach to the craft keep it up.
Maybe in a future video, Should be easy crafts.
Really great intro (and tutorial of course !) as always ! Congrats !
Thanks bro! ;)
wow incredible work man. also the paint job is perfect. i appreciated that you research the right color and not throw the horrible black coat that everyone does on rocks.
Thanks ! Well i Guess it depends on what you're going for. Doing a dark stonejob seems pretty relevant if your going for some fantasy evil castle. But yeah if you want a more realistic approach limestone should defenetly be considered!
What you have made on this video is of very high quality! keep up the great work man.
Thanks you!
Fantastic build!!
Thanks !
This is really great.
Nice one good ideers.. love it
Thanks Stefan!
Another project for my town. Love it!
Cool! Glad you can put this to use !
I just love your stuff!
Thanks for your feedback Jacob, glad you enjoy my content! Cheers!
Absolutely fantastic!
Thanks you Max! :)
Great work, as usual! I really like your style and I will be trying my best to replicate your sandstone style. I've already made a few weapon racks with some success. I am blending a number of people's style that I watch on UA-cam. When I get to stone work, I'll use your style.
I'll be looking forward to the next build.
Thanks ! In this tutorial i unfortunately forgot to show/mention i also did a drybrush of white over the salmon midtones of the stonework. But i did show it in other vid!
This is some awesome work 👍 Thanks for sharing 😁
Thank you for commenting!🤜💥🤛
Wow. Breathtaking. Great job. Thanks
Great work, love the paintjob.
Thanks!
Nice work, good tutorial.
Thanks!
It looks great
Thanks!
Very nice work. Love the toothpick stakewall, amazing! :) I also saw the nice bow/weapon rack on the palisade, nice touch!
Thanks!
Looks great! You’re so creative.
Thanks!
Great job ! Super boulot. Tu as plusieurs tutos excellents dont je m'inspire pour ma propre table pour le jeu Briskars - j'attends tes prochains tutos avec impatience !
Merci! Content que mon contenu te soit utile. Les tutos ça traine un peu en ce moment a cause du taf mais il devrait y en avoir un nouveau dans pas longtemps je l'ai entamé il y a deux semaines...
Like all your work, looks so cool!
Thanks Tom!
Another great one my friend
Thanks Jason!
lovely build, great tutorial, and a bloody funny intro! XD keep it up man!
Thanks man! I'll do my best 😉
Looks great man, well done!
Thanks !
1 dislike think that's your Chinese restaurant owner. You number 10 customer always ask for many chopsticks. Looks great Landva you always very interesting builds.
Thanks Chris. Lol probably, we mosty order japanese though but hey they offer up to 4 chopsticks free of charge i only ask for what is already available. 😉 however building an actual set of modular palissade will surely ask a lot more of them. Buying them in bulk will most certains come cheaper!
@@LandvaettrsLair I have a hard time remembering how to spell your name when telling someone about your channel. You and Max DM have the greatest accents of game crafters and are some out the most interesting builders on here.
@@AlexBabcock-hw9iz yeah defenetly isn't the most advertising-wise name for a Channel. Maybe I should rename it but for now i like it, it's original I guess. If you remembered Landva just needs to add "ettr" 😉 thanks for your support!
Brilliant stuff, man.
Thank you!
i liked this one!
Amazing Project. Good Work!
Really nice Video. Inspired me a lot and cant wait to start crafting. 😍 Espacially because it is modular.
Cool! if you ever post the result on the tabletop crafters guild tag me i'd hate to miss it.
Awesome build once again, love the tutorials.
Thanks!
Wow. Just Wow!!!
This is so amazing man. Im astonished..
Thanks, glad you liked :)
Awesome work bro! Everyone one of your vids that I've watched have been exceptional imho.
Thanks, glad you liked.
This was you!? I remember seeing pictures of this bump across one of my crafting pages before, but never realized there was a tutorial out there.
Yeah sure maybe, I post regularly on The Tabletop Crafting Guild on Fb...Anyway Welcome on Landvaettr's Lair!
Had a good laugh at the beginning 🤣
Glad you liked, my stupid intros are the funiest part in making the tutorials lol.
This tutorial was excatly what I needed for my upcoming tapletop RPG night. The palisade is sturdy, detailed and looks great. One question: What was the thickness of foam you measured for the wall walks? Inch or more? Also, thanks for the painting tips!
Sorry for the late reply. The catwalk needs to be at least larger than a miniature base but overall thicknesses is up to you. I'd say the wall was 2.5- 3 cm thick.
Lovely work! I like your palisades better than mine! As an aside, I don't know how it's said in French, but in English, we usually pronounce "Celts" as "Kelts" not "Selts." The exception is Boston's basketball team: the Celtics (said as Seltics.) Historians invariably use the K sound.
Thanks Alex! And thank you for the pronunciation tip! Celt is indeed pronounced "Selt" in French, hence the mistake.
@@LandvaettrsLair it’s not a mistake :) French is French.
Sure! Let's settle for mispronciation, since the video was delivered in English after all! 😉
Great video! What minis were on the palisade while you were showcasing the results? They look really nice
Thanks! These are from fireforge games miniatures. They're meant for wargaming and are plastic so are pretty affordable and look historic for XIVth-XVth century mean at arms.
Thank you! I looked on the site and found them.
@@genericlegionaryrecruit7235 careful though these look ever so slightly smaller than regular 28mm. Maybe you can find a comparison online somewhere
@@LandvaettrsLair I think their Forgotten World Northmen better match scale
@@genericlegionaryrecruit7235 yeah seen a post about that on fb if I recall
Cool!
Excellent!
Do you weather and wood grain the planks after they are attached for precision? I'd worry about messing it up but yours turned out great.
Yes mostly. But it'll be faster to do it beforehand on the whole coffee stirrer of course!
Excellent tutorial, the miniatures that appear in this video and in the previous ones of which brand they are?
Excellent tutoriel, les miniatures qui apparaissent dans cette vidéo et dans les précédentes de quelle marque sont-elles?
Soldier with crossbow : fireforge games miniatures
Soldier with Spears: V&V miniatures
Townfolks: Reaper and Fenryll miniatures
@@LandvaettrsLair ok thank great master
@@juanmacc4124 You're welcome, my humble follower. *Evil laughter*
Très bon rendu. Le mur de soutènement constitué de branchages est inédit pour moi. C’était utilisé au début du moyen âge ? En tout cas j’adore
Merci, de mémoire c'est plutôt Celte ou Gallo-Romain, en tout cas c'est les cultures dont j'ai tiré mes sources. Mais les palissades se retrouvaient bien sûr dans les mottes castrales du haut moyen age, le soutènement était parfois absent ou constitué d'un remblai de terre pour les citadelles danoises par exemple. A ma connaissance ce type de soutènement d'est pas sourcé pour cette époque mais on reste dans la même logique de soutènement, de chemin de ronde et d'économie des matériaux, et puis en ce qui me concerne ça reste pour du jeu de rôle ;).
Landvaettr's Lair Merci pour ces explications. Le modélisme pousse à faire des recherches historiques voir archéologiques ce qui est enrichissant
ah, ces tuto sont vraiment de qualité, merci!
Question mega bête: comment on appelle de la colle PVC en France? t'achètes ça où à Paris? Moi j'utilise toujours de la colle à bois...
Hey merci beaucoup pour la réponse. De la colle blanche chez Rougié, je peux trouver!
@@amdnable heh après je viens d'acheter la bouteille hein j'utilisait autre chose avant donc je sais pas si c'est le must, mais a priori ça a fonctionné pour tenir les cure-dents!
Wow la classe!
Merci!
@@LandvaettrsLair il n’y aura plus d’autres tuto? Ceux sur le navire viking les palissades en plessis et les palissades modulables sont des masterclass
Merci Paul! Il n'y aura plus de tutos extensifs comme ces derniers, qui demandaient beaucoup de travail de montage. Je n'ai plus autant de temps devant moi et il faut savoir prioriser. Néanmoins j'envisage des formats courts sans montage de 5 minutes du type "short tips" ainsi que des vidéos sporadiques de démonstration ou je montre des créations abouties de type diorama et ou j'illlustre processus de fabrication, dans ses grandes lignes. Dès que j'aurais un peu de temps! En attendant si tu es sur Instagram tu peux my suivre jy suis un peu plus actif!
instagram.com/landvaettr
Which paint did you use for the wood and were did you bought the foam?
standart acrylics craft paint. Probably Amsterdam for the brand... Bought the foam at a DIY store, in the insulation foam section.
@@stableable5441 Nice to hear! Yeah the ont tedious part is the wood pileup, but its not a mandatory part I you wanna save time. Happy crafting!
Excellent, very simple but incredibly effective. Takes a lot of work, though. How's your stop motion puppet project moving along?
Not much right now i must say, making a tutorial takes time :D but's I'll get back to it soon!
muito bom...
Thank you!
What type of foam are you using?
"Foamcore". But here in France we can get some without the paper backing.
Silly question: could you use the chopsticks in a pencil sharpener to achieve the point?
Ain't silly at all! Yes you could, I thought about it but it wasn't suiting to my chopsticks since they were mostly made out of hard bamboo with an eliptic section. But if you're using softer wood it can defenetly be an option to start removing most of the matter before scoring...
Saw your FB post. Had to se it! :D
Why did you take the effort to do toothpicks on both sides of the walk wall if one is going to go against the vertical logs of the palisade so they won't be visible?
How do you make your castle walls and those modular pieces?
explained that at the beginning of the vid on the thatched roof if I remember correctly. But there are many other ways to do it... ua-cam.com/video/gM7izZHEyEU/v-deo.html
What is the ratio of dark umber to modge podge? I've never used modge podge before and have not been able to find how much of the modge podge to add to the paint.
If your craftpaint is acrylic you can mix a ratio of 1/3 modpoge to paint, you can go up to 50/50. Depends how sturdy you want your piece, you will eventually loose details if you use too much also modge podge isnt cheap. If the paint is gouache gotta go for a 50/50 mix regardless though... hope this helped
@@LandvaettrsLair Thank you for the quick response. I was able to order a 32 oz jar on Amazon for $13.28 which I thought was quite reasonable.
What miniature line are your crossbowmen and archers?
Fireforge games miniatures. There meant for wargaming and come on boxes of twenty or so. Pretty affordable and also looks historical. However they are slightly smaller than most 28mm miniatures. Not totally off scale but they defenetly look like short men. I usually stick them on a thicker base and mostly use them as genereric soldiers.
The Spearman what mini line is he from
?
V&V miniatures. vminiatures.com/28-mm/vikings/vikings-28
What part of France are you from?
Born in south of France, but I've been living in Paris for a while now. Why?
@@LandvaettrsLair I was just wondering because your accent is different from the French accent I'm used to hearing
@@DakotaMilesO I grew up learning english amongst numerous native speakers from different origins, probably had an influence...
You could also use a pencil sharpener!
Yes you could, but it wasn't suiting my chopsticks since they were mostly made out of hard bamboo with an eliptic section. But if you're using softer wood it can defenetly be an option to start removing most of the matter before scoring...
taht roleplay ;o
:D
:)