1. It must look better than a piece of felt. Some people shoot for the stars. I aim for the ground because I can hardly miss!
2. It must be light. Since I rarely host a game in my house, I have to drag my 6' x4' canvass terrain mat, a box full of terrain and my armies on the road. It's quite a load and the more terrain I make, the heavier my terrain box becomes. So this time, I'm not putting loads of water putty onto the mdf.
3. It must be versatile. My current collection of terrain was bought or made for Field of Glory. The terrain I'm making here is for Maurice. As time goes by, there'll be more rules and systems to play so ideally, I want this to work under multiple rulesets.
First up was a marsh. You're thinking that right away, I violated Rule #3. It's hard to pretend a marsh is anything other than a marsh but I made so it's sized to work under both Maurice and Field of Glory (if I push all 3 pieces together).
I mixed up a thick batch of water putty, smeared it on the mdf and dropped bark in to give it visual interest. Then I covered it with a dark brown basecoat with dark green in the low spots where the Woodland Scenics Water Effects will go. After it dried, I put a wash of diluted brown ink over it to muddy up the water. Then some flocking and I've got marshes.
I mixed up a thick batch of water putty, smeared it on the mdf and dropped bark in to give it visual interest. Then I covered it with a dark brown basecoat with dark green in the low spots where the Woodland Scenics Water Effects will go. After it dried, I put a wash of diluted brown ink over it to muddy up the water. Then some flocking and I've got marshes.