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Love the daemonic visage on the chestplate, Kraut. It really makes it pop and helps break up the red of the model a bit better. Well done!

 

On that note I must have missed where you said that piece came from. Any clues please?

Cheers, guys! :)

 

@ The Hydra: Oh, absolutely: It's cold fury all the way for the Baron!

 

@ Noctus Cornix: Cheers, mate! I like to imagine that the face on the one hand and the red on the other hand do a pretty good job at counterbalancing one another: Each of those elements would probably be drawing too much attention away from the rest of the model if left unchecked, but the combination of both basically makes for the balance needed to sell the model -- at least, that's what I would like to believe ;)

 

@ Thousand Eyes: The face is a piece from the WFB Warshrine of Chaos, while the lower jaw came from the Ogre Kingdoms Ironguts (it's a slightly cut-down banner)

 

 

So, the last round of pictures basically showed the finished model, as there was only some minor cleanup work to do after that. So today, let me provide you with another round of pictures that will mainly show you some detail views of the Knight.

 

Before that, here's a look at the whole model again. I give you Gilgamesh, the Warrior King, the Twice-Consecrated, Son of the Ember Queen, the 4th assault company’s very own Knight Titan:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750145-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750146-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

It probably won’t surprise you that I am just immensely happy with this model right now: It has been quite a journey, but in the end I ended up accomplishing pretty much all that I had set out to do with this model, and all without cutting any corners, which is no small feat for me ;) Oh, and the fact that the start to painting the model was rather bumpy and almost made me abandon the piece in frustration makes this success all the sweeter now!

 

So let’s take a closer look at some of the detail, because that’s really the fun part with a model of this size: To add stuff that may not be immediately noticeable but that hints at the machine’s backstory and long years of service. Again, most of you will already be familiar with most of these details, but please bear with me here — I am just really proud of the model right now:

 

The Knight proudly displays the heraldry of the XII Legion Astartes, be it on the heraldic plate…

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750147-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

(I did clean up the legion badge a bit. It's subtle, but I think the design works better for it)

 

...…or on its right shoulder pad:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750148-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

In the latter case, the legion badge is supplemented by the Legion and company number, respectively. The other shoulder pad, meanwhile, shows a massive brazen icon of the Blood God, chained into place in the gladiatorial style of the legion and decorated in many smaller totems and icons:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750149-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

On to the next area I would like to showcase: While you have already seen the look at the pilot through the top hatch, it bears mentioning that I have left the entire top carapace detachable, so let us take a closer look, shall we?

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750150-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

The carapace can be taken of with a bit of fiddling and will also reliably snap back into place, so it seemed like a no brainer not to glue it in. So we can get a better look at the cockpit. Like so:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750151-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

And here’s a view from the top, showing both the cockpit and engine compartment:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750153-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

And a side view, showing the construction below it all:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750152-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

In this picture you can also make out the piece of sprue I have used to keep the joint at the waist flexible. And here’s a look at the monitor banks showing vital battlefield information to the Baron:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750154-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

All of this has been kitbashed from different vehicle bitz and some plasticard, but I think I’ve managed to combine it into a rather cohesive whole. What’s more, the design even resembles Forgeworld’s “official” Knight interiors released for the Cerastus Knight variants — no small feat when you consider that those versions weren’t even available yet when I started converting my own Knight.

 

In addition to the top carapace, the shoulder pads and arms have also been left detachable, so the entire Knight can be disassembled fairly thoroughly. Take a look:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750155-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.JPG

 

Since all of the parts lock into place fairly reliably without glue, there was really no point to attaching them permanently. Plus the weapons can be properly aligned and turned towards the enemy during games. Oh, and I am also free to maybe build an alternate pair of weapon arms for the Knight one of these days…

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750156-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

Before I started working on the Knight, the biggest conversion I had ever tackled was my Wargrinder, a custom Dreadknight conversion. And while I am still very proud of this model, it does look almost puny when placed next to its bigger brother. Take a look:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750157-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Comparison%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Engine%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh.jpg

 

Quite a difference, eh? Speaking of which, the picture also shows that the red used on my Knight noticeably differs from the red used on the rest of my World Eaters. While I would have loved the colours to be the same, I ultimately had to make this decision because my World Eaters colour scheme relies on the – now OOPGW Blood Red, and my reserves of this colour would never have sufficed to paint a model of this size to a standard I was happy with. In the end, I chose to make the Knight the best it could possibly be — at the price of a bit of visual coherency. But when all is said and done, I think it’s a difference I can easily live with: The model still looks like it belongs with the rest of the army, and a Knight Titan is really different enough from an Astartes vehicle or daemon engine to warrant a bit of visual divergence.

Oh, and while we are on the subject of scale comparisons, here’s a picture showing a power armoured World Eater, a Terminator, a Dreadnought, the Wargrinder and the Chaos Knight, just to put the scale in perspective:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750158-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Comparison%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Dreadnought%2C%20Gilgamesh.jpg

 

All in all, this has been an absolutely fantastic project for me, because it has really taught me so much, both about big models, but also about giving a model the time it deserves in order to really make it shine. What’s more, this Chaos Knight really turned into a bit of a community project somewhere along the way, as the feedback I received here and on forums like Dakka, The B&C or The Ammobunker really provided immensely helpful advice and helped me to stay focused whenever there was a danger of slacking off ;)

 

If I have to name on source of inspirations above all others, it would have to be JeffTibbett’s brilliant Freeblade, the “Queen Bee”, though: Jeff’s work really taught me a new way of looking at a Knight and how to do justice to one of this ancient, hallowed warmachines. So thanks a lot to all those who provided valuable feedback and cheers to you, Jeff!

 

 

So, anything else? Well, speaking of the amount of history behind Knights, we cannot possibly wind up this post without taking a look at the history of this particular machine and its pilot, can we? So here’s what I’ve come up with for the two:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/7/30/732618-Baron%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

Baron Augustus Melchiah Harrowthorne

 

Knight Baron Harrowthorne was the leader of the honourable Covenant of Paladins, an alliance of knight households formed to defend a forgeworld in the eastern fringe. While several of the other powerful houses were forever planning and plotting to engineer their own rise to power, Harrowthorne’s honour and purity cemented his position as the Covenant’s leader, and his ancestral fortress, the Harrowspyke, remained the seat of government of his knight world.

 

When the world came under heavy attack from an Ork invasion, an expeditionary fleet made up of elements of the XIIth and XVIIth Legion Astartes arrived in the nick of time, supporting the Covenant of Paladins and routing the xenos attack force. With the world saved, Baron Harrowthorne felt honour-bound to not only pledge allegiance to the Imperium of Man, but also to join the expeditionary fleet himself as a representative of the Covenant, in order to pay back the debt of honour he owed the Legiones Astartes.

 

Harrowthorne fought alongside the XIIth legion during the latter Great Crusade and was still attached to the World Eaters when the Horus Heresy broke out. The events at Isstvan made him realise that the Warmaster’s forces were now considered heretics and traitors by the rest of the Imperium. To distance himself from them would have been the most prudent course of action, and possibly the only way of preventing his own knight world from being purged by the loyalists. But Harrowthorne still felt indebted to the legion that had saved him.

 

Harrowthorne came up with the only compromise that would keep both his knight world and his own honour intact: He stepped down from his position as head of his household and leader of the Covenant of Paladins. He would remain with the the Astartes of the XIIth legion, to whom he still felt indebted. He also sent word to his sons to fight him and bring him to justice, should he ever return to his homeworld, for he was to be considered a traitor.

 

As prudent and honourable as this course of action had been, it did not work out: Word was sent by astropath that Harrowthorne’s whole household had been wiped out by the rivaling nobles. The Harrowspyke had been razed to the ground, and Harrowthorne’s two sons had been shot dead in sight of the smouldering ruins, without even a chance to prove their honour in a knightly duel.

 

Harrowthorne was beside himself with grief and self-hatred, when Lord Captain Lorimar of the 4th assault company approached him: Lorimar proposed to accompany the Knight Baron to his homeworld, where he would have his revenge. His debt of honour, Lorimar argued, went both ways, and the World Eaters would not forget Harrowthorne’s brave service at their side.

 

The Covenant of Paladins may have been a formidable force, but it was all but powerless against the wrath of an entire assault company of World Eaters: The 4th fell onto the world like a pack of wolves falls upon its prey. With Harrowthorne leading the assault, all the noble houses that had engineered his downfall were wiped out. The leader of the conspiracy was shot in the head with a mere service pistol on the plains surrounding his smouldering keep, denied the courtly respect that he himself had denied Harrowthorne’s sons.

 

Afterwards, Harrowthorne felt nothing but a great emptiness. But Lorimar approached the Knight Baron and offered him a chance at revenge even beyond his own homeworld: Once again, the Baron and the World Eaters would be united by a common goal: Terra must burn!

 

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/12/750159-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Gilgamesh%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

Gilgamesh, the Warrior King, the Twice-Consecrated, Son of the Ember Queen

Harrowthorne’s ancient Knight Titan has become a sight to be feared on battlefields across the galaxy. Its baroque form towers over the ranks of World Eaters marching to war alongside it, and seems like an avatar of the Blood God given form, clad in monstrous, barbed plate of arterial red and darkened brass. No traces of House Harrowthorne’s original heraldry remain on Gilgamesh’s body, as the Knight has been repainted and re-consecrated to mirror the post-heresy heraldry of the XII Legion Astartes – proof of the Baron’s honorary membership in the legion.

 

Trophies and totems cover the machine’s form, and battle honours from its ten millennia of service alongside the World Eaters are still displayed proudly on banners and armour plates: the details of bloody campaigns on Jubal, Badlanding, Armatura and countless other worlds. The badge of the Legio Audax, commemorating the day when Gilgamesh was named “Son of the Ember Queen” by the Legio’s Princeps Ultima. And, of course, the bloody handprints adorning the Knight’s shin armour, placed there before every battle by the legionaries of the 4th, both as an oath of moment and a good luck charm.

 

Gilgamesh’s metallic form houses a particularly vicious and spiteful machine spirit, driven to anguish over the fall of House Harrowthorne just like its master. In communion, man and machine now turn their cold fury towards the enemies of the 4th assault company, and few can stand before the wrath of the Warrior King and live to tell the tale…

 

 

 

So, when all is said and done, I hope you like this detailed view at my Chaos Knight. I’ll be honest: I cannot take my eyes off the model right now, as I really consider it one of my biggest hobby achievements so far. Getting to the point where I actually have the skillset necessary to tackle a model like this and end up with a result I am happy with has been quite a journey indeed!

 

So anyway, I’d love to hear any feedback you might have on Gilgamesh and the Baron — and, as always, thanks for looking and stay tuned for more!

First off, congratulations to you, KrautScientist, for finishing this awesome project. It was a pleasure to see you take your time and give this piece the attention it deserves. I feel strangely proud of you for sticking to it, despite setbacks and RL, both with the actual Work in Progress, as with the updates and comms our way! Your attention to detail - both on the model as in your communication to us, your followers - is addictive and inspirational. Well done, buddy! :) :tu: 

Thanks for the very positive feedback, everyone! As you might have guessed, this has been a rather massive undertaking, and it's great to see that people like the finished model and the background I have come up with to accompany it!

Hey everyone, not a massive update today, but I felt I still have to tie up some loose ends regarding my Chaos Knight.

 

The first of those loose ends was to paint the alternate weapon option: I've left the gun barrels exchangeable, so all I needed to do was to get some paint on the Thermal Cannon muzzle in order to make my Knight useable as either a Paladin or Errant:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/21/752183-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/21/752184-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/21/752187-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

To be fair, though, it's a fairly lazy version of this particular conversion, because it doesn't extend to the tanks on the side of the weapons and is limited to the actual barrel of the gun:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/21/752185-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

While I did want to have the extra option, I far prefer the long-barrelled gun from a visual standpoint, and it's also very much a visual part of my Chaos Knight, so I went the easy route for once. I did some minor conversion work, however, in order to bring the look of the thermal cannon in line with the warlike, spiky look of the rest of the model:

 

http://images.dakkadakka.com/gallery/2015/10/21/752186-Chaos%20Knight%2C%20Conversion%2C%20Daemon%20Knight%2C%20Harrowthorne%2C%20Imperial%20Knight.jpg

 

Oh, and there's also one very nice observation that fellow hobbyist Freytag93 brought up over on Dakka:

 

 

Also, I like the statue on the base. To me, the face echos the face of the baron (probably cause of the shared scar), giving a contrast to his fallen honor.

 

While the effect is completely coincidental, I really love this! Isn't it great when people discover something about your models that you didn't even put there in the first place -- at least not consciously? :)

 

As always, let me know what you think!

That's such a cool point about the face. I love art for the fact that it's totally open to this sort of interpretation. Now we can debate about whether our hobby constitutes actual art or not. I'd vote yes, in some cases. Gilgamesh certainly qualifies, in my book. 

Haha, as someone who is pretty heavily into video games (and also into the aesthetic discussion sourrounding them as a medium), I can say from my own experience that discussions in the "Is X art?" vein tend to be long, convoluted, painful and, I would argue, ultimately pointless ;) For me, it's good enough that this hobby can be surprisingly deep sometimes, in spite of all its absurdities and idiosyncratic elements. Plus it's a terrific outlet for creativity.

I do like the extra option of the weapon, very cool looking. It also fits in with the rest of the model rather well.

 

Between you and Tibbs you are pushing me closer to trying to scratch build my own knight.

Great work on the thermal cannon there, Kraut. I actually prefer the stubby snout of it, but beauty (as is whether or not something might be considered 'art') is in the eye of the beholder. That dakka member made a nice spot there. :)

Thanks, mate! That juggernaut armour plate did seem like a nice way of making the weapon instantly read as "Khornate", while also replicating the three spikes seen on the other cannon (and the Knight's chainsword).

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