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Farmer's House - Small Works Project

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This is a Farmer's house that I constructed. I made this in four parts before gluing each part together. The first part is the terracotta base, the "stone section" of the house, constructing it with both cross beams, windows and a doorway in mind. The second part is the lower wood structures that come out in the front, for this , I constructed the walls and back support piece, holes were drilled into both this and the clay to allow pegs to be fitted into it. While it is hard to see both physically and in the picture, I carved and cut out a doorway into the back with each of these sections, a hidden detail at this point. For the roof I had to use thread to help hold the slanted parts in place while gluing. The final section is the top section, this was constructed very similar to the other wood sections but also had support beams and columns added, windows cut into the walls. This one is where a removable roof could have been better, but it was again fragile.

The Farmer's house
/ Meeting Hal on the map and the scale of this building is 170 feet long by 80 feet wide and roughly 36 feet high. This is to a 6 by 6 by 6 inch scale meaning one inch equal roughly 28.3 feet

The map for the city can be found here: Wartor Map with Key. The buildings code for this one on the wartor map is: building code 39. To find the group picture and links to the rest of the project, you can find them on this group picture here: Small Works Project - Buildings from Wartor

Made out of terracotta clay and wood

Please comment and let me know what you think, just keep in mind this is more of a preview for what’s to come.

Art, Concept & Culture © :iconealdeth:

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© 2017 - 2024 Ealdeth
Comments2
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ThunderClawShocktrix's avatar
heh it looks like its from oh the 1600 or 1700's at the newest