Episodes 3 and 4 of Crooked Dice’s 7TV campaign ‘Beneath the Mountains of Madness’ include some wonderfully gribbly items of scenery, described in Ep 3 as ‘Organic Chambers’ and in Ep 4 as ‘Gestation Vats’ which “bubble furiously as proto-Shoggoths take form in the seething fluids.”
The map illustrations show ridged, circular fleshy chambers atop stone platforms with tentacles emerging from bubbling fluids to rest limply against the sides of the vat.
Some wonderful sculpts for these were made available by Crooked Dice as STLs through the BTMOM Kickstarter campaign. I purchased the STL from My Mini Factory and had four copies printed.
When considering what colour scheme to use for these vats, I decided I wanted bruised flesh tones for the vats and that the tentacles would be black, a la Shoggoth. For the colour of the fluids, my mind kept going back to the cover of a wonderfully pulpy horror novel I read in my youth called ‘The Sucking Pit’ , by Guy N. Smith. As you can see below, it features a swirling mess of green and orange goop, lotsa teef and a dash of skulls. I fetched my copy of the book down off the shelf and wondered how best to recreate the look of the Sucking Pit for these vats.
After an undercoat of Colour Forge Matt black, I airbrushed on a base coat of Vallejo Model Colour 72.014 purple, followed by a coat of Citadel Bugman’s Glow, trying to leave the purple showing between the vat’s ridges.
Staying with my airbrush, I added a layer of Citadel Cadian Fleshtone, followed by a layer of Citadel Kislev Flesh. I was happy with the general fleshy effect this gave, but wanted to make the vats ‘pop’ a bit more.
Swapping to bristled brushes, I lightened the Kislev Flesh with some white and drybrushed it on. The layers of the 3D print immediately sprang to sight, but after an initial panic I decided I liked the look and fully committed to the drybrushing.
After painting the teeth around the top of the vats in Army Painter Skeleton Bone, I created some shadow by brushing some ‘Marine Juice’ into the recesses between the horizontal fleshy ridges and where the claw-like appendages grasp them. A quick splash of the same to shade the teeth and that was the vats’ exteriors sorted.
The “seething fluids” were given a base coat of Vallejo Game Colour Scorpion Green, which I shaded with Citadel Contrast Ork flesh.
Then it was a matter of highlighting the fluids, first with VGC Scorpion Green, then a mix of that and Vallejo Model Colour Yellow Green and highlighting further with a lightened shade of the same. I added ribbons of Army Painter Lava Orange here and there too and decided the fluids now looked suitably icky.

I did initially think I’d paint the fluids using my airbrush, to get smoother shades of colour, but combined concerns about getting green or orange where I didn’t want it on the fleshy parts (oo-er) and how well the orange would cover the green if airbrushed on, made me opt to apply the colours using a bristled brush instead. The final results aren’t quite what I had in my mind’s eye, but I’m happy enough with them.
Now that the fluids were painted green, the uniformity of the fleshy colours of the vats’ exteriors began to bug me, so I applied a wash of (IIRC) Army Painter Soft Tone ink over the lowest of the ridges and the ‘claws’ to make the vats’ bases and claw ‘columns’ a bit more distinct from the other fleshy ridges.
Now there were just the tentacles to paint. I decided to use one of the Vallejo ‘Space Dust’ colour shift paints I have, as there’s a nicely iridescent Electric Blue/Intense Violet that I thought could be particularly ‘Shoggothy’. A base coat of gloss black and a daubing of shifter paint later, I called the four gestation vats done.
The only snag with colour shift paints is that you can’t really shade them, so in the photo above and below the tentacles may look a little… flat, but in real life they look much better as light plays on them and as you look at the vats whilst moving around the scenery.
I don’t think I’ll paint my Shoggoth miniatures solely using shifter paints, but I’ll experiment with a dry brush of it for some hopefully eerie iridescence.
As always – thanks for reading!:)
If you’ve enjoyed these hobby ramblings, you’ll find links to the previous BTMOM posts below.
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 1 – Introduction
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 2 – Antarctic Pressure Ridges
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 3 – XPS Rock Formations
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 4 – 3D Printed Rock Formations
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 5 – Antarctic Stalagmites
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 6 – Antarctic Ice Formations
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness part 7 – Long Sun Research Base Derrick & Air Shaft
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 8: Long Sun Research Base
7TV: Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 10: Antarctic Nissen Hut
7TV:Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 11: Antarctic Survey Tent
7TV:Beneath the Mountains of Madness Part 12: Elder Thing City
































































