So realistic that it actually looks like you'd skin your hands and face if you ran into it. Excellent job.
Point taken on the tarmac, although was that an urban school, rather than a rural one? (I'm guessing it was a Catholic school given the unusual "interaction" between the swimmers.) Interrogation of elderly relatives - not all my own - suggests that tarmac playgrounds were pretty much the norm by the 1930s (it's amazing what a desk lamp and a sock full of wet sand will make a nonagenarian reveal). Who knew? (Well, you did, obviously.....)
Ayton VBCW build
- BaronVonWreckedoften
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
Kein Plan überlebt den ersten Kontakt mit den Würfeln. (No plan survives the first contact with the dice.)
Baron Mannshed von Wreckedoften, First Sea Lord of the Bavarian Admiralty.
Baron Mannshed von Wreckedoften, First Sea Lord of the Bavarian Admiralty.
Re: Ayton VBCW build
In my school we were dragged kicking and screaming into the 1930s in about 1976, when they tarmac'd our playground...
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- grizzlymc
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
Bastards!
- levied troop
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
Out of curiousity, what were they using before 1976?
I’ve always thought of tarmac as a cheap and cheerful solution and every school I can recall from the early sixties was using it. Only the posh kids got grass playing fields.
I get lockdown, but I get up again.
Re: Ayton VBCW build
It was a very eroded clay/stone surface that turned to a mudbath every time it rained. That said, I'm thinking of the fenced-in 'extended' playground that was probably established post-WW2. There was a walled-in yard in front of the old part of the school that by then was the staff car-park, but which was probably the original playground and may well have been tarmac'd or cobbled pre-war.levied troop wrote: ↑Wed Oct 03, 2018 3:32 pmOut of curiousity, what were they using before 1976?
I’ve always thought of tarmac as a cheap and cheerful solution and every school I can recall from the early sixties was using it. Only the posh kids got grass playing fields.
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/
- Zenbadger
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
My primary school had a playground made of pit tailings, basically all the stuff that comes up with the coal but won't burn. Since the pit closed in 1908 I'm guessing it wasn't new. It was basically dusty grey grit with bits of crushed coal which from a distance might look a bit like weathered tarmac.
- goat major
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
This is looking bloody fantastic! Thanks for pulling this together John. Purps has also got some great projects underway as well. Its going to be a beautiful looking table
Re: Ayton VBCW build
First square foot of texture for the Ayton Terrain Mats is dry!
179 to go...
179 to go...
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- goat major
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Re: Ayton VBCW build
Yey !!
Slightly too many hussars though
Slightly too many hussars though