
Sean C. Macdonald |

Jill of the Nile |

That is great, Sean!
I had a different approach (plus I didn't want to paint anything). I wanted one with the porch as on the map in the Reign of Winter - The Shackled Hut on page 51 so I could place miniatures on the porch. I also referenced the image on page 63 as well.
I made a screenshot of the porch map then enlarged that image to make the squares (roughly) 1" when printed. I used Microtatix's The Vyllage House paper model. I printed it at 105% to get it closer to 3x3 and printed two copies to use the front and side twice and cut off the rear add-on to make it a square two-story. I completely wimped out on the chicken legs but still wanted a base to raise it off the ground. I simply created a 3x3 cardboard stand about 2" high.
You can see some pictures of Baba Yaga's (paper) Hut here:
Dancing Hut Picture 1
Dancing Hut Picture 2
Dancing Hut Picture 3
Dancing Hut Picture 4
Dancing Hut Picture 5

wackyanne |

I love what everyone has done! Although, I must admit you scared me, DM Jeff, when you said "After a few trips to a local farmer's market we got the parts" I thought you were picking up spare chicken feet from the butcher! ;)
You may be interested to know that Fat Dragon Games, who produce _awesome_ papercraft terrain that you download in PDF format to print-at-home, have got a kickstarter project on now for a highly-detailed and versatile village set called Ravenfell.
I convinced them to make the first stretch goal Baba Yaga's hut! Fat Dragon Tom worked out the design of the legs awhile back, but is now looking for feedback on the design of the Hut itself if you want to chip in. I think Pathfinder gets the best of the D&D flavour for the Hut, while sticking to the traditional appearance from Slavic folklore, but I know that even here some might want it "old school". Search for Ravenfell on Kickstarter or go to fatdragongames at pro boards dot com for the forums...