Showing posts with label Magister Militum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magister Militum. Show all posts

Monday, 20 June 2016

Painting Progress: Basing #1


Pictured above is the scene of prolific semi-organised chaos on my 'workbench'*. 

I decided to unearth some 10mm Napoleonic 1812 battalions - only two: one French, one Russian - and think about basing some figures, at long last. In the process I recovered some other almost forgotten figures, including four 40mm AWI figures by Front Rank, which my wife bought me at some show several years ago, in a bid to get me working in a scale she could appreciate without an electron microscope.

AW 15mm Peninsular Brits (discontinued?) [1]; Magister Militum 10mm French, and Old Glory 10mm Russians. [2]

Unfortunately I have very little to hand suitable for basing, as I've yet to come up with definitive decisions on my methodology. I have, however, collected some odds and sods, in the form of a few packets of various sized pre-cut MDF bases. Mostly by (I think?) Minibits.

I soon discovered that, out of all the odds and ends I can currently find, only two, or perhaps three, at best, were suited to my current wants and needs: consequently I could only base one French 10mm battalion, an (under strength) 15mm British Peninsular battalion, my 20mm SS Cavalry, and the 40mm Front Rank AWI guys.

I opted to pair these guys off, excepting only the dismounted fellow...

... who stand guard over an assortment of temporarily discarded gear...

... whilst his buddies are out on patrol.

I used to base my old Minifigs 15mm and the like on card bases (!?), onto which I'd superglue the figures, before 'bedding them in' with Milliput. This last step was done to create a stronger base where the white metal bases of the figures would be flush with the tops of the scenic bases. I used to texture the Milliput with a pin (!?), before blocking in with grass green, and finally doing a dark green wash, followed by a light green dry-brush. Before the enamel paint had dried I'd scatter some green railway modeller's scenic flock over them. Presto, my basing was done!

Fast-forward 20+ years, and these modern MDF bases are so much better than my flimsy card bases ever were. But I thought I'd honour the old tradition, at least on some of the larger scale figures, and use Milliput on some of these bases. So rather than starting on the 10mm or 15mm units, I went with the SS Cavalry and AWI bases. The process can be seen in the two accompanying sets of pics on this post. This time around I used an old toothbrush and a cruddy paintbrush to texture the Milliput.

40mm giants ...

... trudging through Milliput snows ...

... with some Spring in their step.

I'm actually quite pleased with how these came out. I will be working further on them; adding sand, grit, grass, etc. But I have to confess I do like the rather toy-like simplicity of blocked green bases!

* The dining-table!

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NOTES:

[1] Looking at the AW Miniatures site today, it appears they no longer do their 15mm Napoleonic figures. A pity that, for me, as my two 'battalions' - one Frnch one British - are both woefully (but, historically speaking, more accurately, perhaps?) under-strength.

[2] These 10mm units were amongst the first units to be painted on my return to the hobby, and have sat, unfinished and gathering dust, for a number of years. Until now!

Thursday, 2 June 2016

More Miscellany - A Loon In June

New drill bits!

In between painting stuff Over the half-term hols, I've continued to fiddle with a couple of models, inc. the 54mm Hussar, and drilling holes in the Sdkfz 7/1. 

The first panel completed.

I have a model-making engineer buddy who tells me he mostly drills holes these days. For me it's still sufficiently novel as to be an almost meditative form of relaxing fun; except, that is, for the hunched posture I feel forced to adopt. Some kind of raised work surface might be a good idea?

That's enough for one day!

So, I'm now well over half way there with my hole-drilling. And, on the whole, I'm not yet wholly insane. 

Two more Russian Grenadier battalions ready for priming/painting.

I'm also working on further batches of 10mm Napoleonics. All Russian at this point, and mostly by Magister Militum, save for the odd Pendraken officer, and two squadrons of Old Glory Hussars. A lone squadron of MM Russian Hussars includes a few figures toting lances. The OG figures don't include any lancers. Can any of you folks tell me what you do, re including lance-bearers in Russian Hussar regiments/squadrons?

The guy on the right of the standing officer with the bicorne is no longer pointing forwards.

I've also had the scalpel and superglue out, doing a bit of surgery on one or two figures. At this tiny scale I don't mind the uniformity of pose for rank and file, but it's nice if officers aren't all identically posed, as they stand out a bit more. So I've lowered a pointing arm (and removed the indicative digit!), and I've got another fellow turning his head. Small changes, but worthwhile, I feel. 

A slight twist of the head to look over the right shoulder for this officer.

This standard bearer kindly donated his plume to an officer.

I also had to add another shako plume to a plume-less Pendraken officer... very fiddly!

And last of all, when I popped over to the Ely model shop for a pot of Vallejo silver acrylic - swearing I'd not be tempted buy anything else - I did at least remember to pick up more 0.5mm drill bits (3! So I have a spare or two). But I spotted an Academy 1/72 German truck (they don't specify the make/model), and simply couldn't resist!

Sadly they only supply sufficient parts to build either/or, and not both variants.

Tuesday, 31 May 2016

Painting Progress: 10mm Napoleonic Russian Grenadier battalion

Determined to return to my Napoleonic 1812 armies, and in true Napoleonic fashion, I decided I'd try to paint a battalion a day over the 1/2-term break. I only got as far as priming and (temporarily) basing this lot on Saturday, and then I got as far as pic three below, by Sunday, whilst ... on bank holiday Monday. 

Well, you get the picture; I'll be lucky if I finish one battalion at this rate!



Before I could start in properly on these fellows I noticed (only after undercoating, as can be seen in the above pics) that one of the figures - a lone Pendraken amongst an otherwise Magister Militum battalion - was sans shako plume. So I cannibalised one from a spare figure, and super-glued it in place. As a by the by, it's interesting to see how different the above pics -taken on my iPhone - are, from those taken on the iPad under exactly the same lighting conditions.

A Humbrol grey acrylic basecoat, plus a few major blocked in areas, inc. dark brown base for flesh!

I'm using some pictures from the Blandford Colour Series title, Uniforms of 1812, by Haythornthwaite and Chappell. Most of my uniform reference books remain packed away in boxes, as we await the purchase of our new home. It's fortunate I stumbled across this handy little book at Salute, as I can't face attacking the Eiger of book boxes! 

Rear view, as above.

At Partizan I was somewhat tempted by a big expensive book in Russian, except that not only was it over £60, but it also only had a small portion of the book given over to the Napoleonic era. I saw an amazing (but even more expensive) Russian book on uniforms - but this one, I think, dedicated to the Napoleonic period - on the Ken Trotman stand a few Salutes back. I do wish I'd bought it! But I think it was £120 or more!

Most major colour blocks in place. Starting in on detailing colours.

But the long and the short of it remains that I have far more and far better ref. on the French and their allies than I do regarding the Russians. It's a good job there's the interweb as well. I've been offline a lot recently, due to being between Holmes, so to speak. Posting to the blog has been a right pain. I finally caved in and got a TP-Link portable hub thingy. It's made getting online easier, but not hassle-free, as we live in an area with appalling network coverage (for most networks, apparently!).

Still a ways to go, but flesh helps them to start looking more human and complete.

Reading the Haythornthwaite entries on Russian Grenadiers, as well as studying the pics, was most useful. I believe I've now picked up some useful general info on Russian line infantry organisation, including some interesting and useful uniform info. It seems that the vast bulk of the Russian infantry will have looked much the same, with units differentiated by very minor details, such as colours and numbers on their shoulder-straps, and the two-colour combinations on the shako 'rosettes' (or are these their pom-poms!?).

More detailing. Boy does it take time and effort!

I've recently bought two work aids, specifically for painting miniatures: a self-illuminating lamp-cum-magnifying glass, and a magnifying visor. The batteries in the lamp stopped supplying sufficient juice after 30mins use (so that may well go back to john Lewis!), hence my buying the visor. The visor is very good, but I'm a long ways from being used to using it. I did use it a fair bit whilst painting these - most the time atop my noggin as an expensive headband - but I figure I'll just have to get used to it at my own speed.

Day three (four, I guess, technically!?); knocked off one a.m. with figures looking like this.

When I think about the mountains of figures I have that need painting, it fills me with foreboding. How on earth will I ever paint them all?



The two pictures above show the present state of these figures, as of Tuesday, May 31st, at two of the clock, post-meridian. 

I quite like them in their current pristine, simple state. I recognise that shading is not on, with so many figures at such a small scale. Were I doing a small diorama, with just a few figures, I might really go to town on them. But given that I want to field large armies, I think it'll have to be a wash, at best.

Anyway, after four days of painting these buggers in almost any free time I could muster, it's time for some couch action, with a mug of hot Java and David Chandler's Campaign's of Napoleon, wherein he's currently guiding me across the bloody fields of Waterloo. It's splendid stuff. And I intend to post on the topic of tip-top trilogies ASAP!

Monday, 23 June 2014

Better late than never?

Currently sitting on my bookshelves (making this pic, in modern parlance, a 'shelfie'): 28mm Perry plastic French skirmishers, with Pendraken and Old Glory 10mm French and Russian infantry behind.


A Kind Of Introduction:

I first set up this blog around Feb 2012, pretty much as soon as I had returned to the hobby after a more than two-decade absence. Having turned 40 in January of that year, I suddenly thought 'Hang on a minute... why am I denying myself the pleasure of following a hobby I once loved so very much?'

Some time in my mid-twenties I'd decided that my interest in wargaming was simply a phase of my childhood, and that, as an adult, I should leave it behind. I know from chatting to other gamers at shows since my return that this pattern is something of a clichĂ©. In this respect I can at least console myself that my behaviour is pretty normal.


Another shameless 'shelfie'... 5 different scales on view here: 1/300th (the ship, dimly visible off-centre-left), 1:72 (Kettenkrad & Kubelwagen), 15mm (Boney & ADC, lancers, etc.) 25/28mm (Salute figures), and 40mm (AWI).


But, for some reason, it's taken another two years plus to actually really start to get the ball rolling. It was fairly wide and voracious reading that had finally brought me back to the hobby. I'd been reading on Napoleonic history in particular - which for me is where it more or less all started - for some years, and mostly about Boney's 1812 debacle, before the reading rekindled the desire to start building armies with a view to, eventually, getting back into gaming.

So this, my first post on this 'ere blog - and I hope the first of many (and I hope quite regular) - will find me setting out my stall and introducing myself, as the foregoing already suggests.


A final 'shelfie' - 6mm Napoleonics on the painting conveyor belt: foreground are Adler, middle are Heroics & Ros, and at the backus are, um... Baccus!


How It All Started:

Phase I - Airfix 20mm plastics

I must confess that my memory ain't poifeck, as Dr John might say, so this may not be 100% accurate. I'll try and keep it simple and brief: as I recall it, I somehow got interested in the battle of Waterloo. And at some point this lead to my receiving for Christmas an Airfix boxed-set, with a model farmhouse, and a bunch of 1:72 or 20mm figures, all in plastic. My memory is rather hazy on exactly which set I actually had, but I think it was this one:



The reason I think it was that one is that I recall it having not just the farmhouse, but also numerous plastic soldiers. I gradually augmented my set with extra boxes of figures, although my local model shop hardly ever carried any Napoleonic cavalry or artillery packs - this was the 'olden days', before the web! - so I was always very infantry heavy. This was all when I was pretty young, and before I got in to metal figures and painting or basing.

I was also heavily influenced by an amazing series of articles run by the National Geographic (I've never yet been able to track down when these articles were run) on the American Civil War, which had these fantastic aerial-view battlefield panoramas, often as four-page wide fold-out spreads. So I bought a few packs of Airfix ACW as well, in their appropriately coloured blue and grey plastic.

The contents of a pack of Airfix ACW Confedrate troops... the Grays, quite literally!


Phase II - The advent of Heavy Metal!

Funnily enough I was also something of a young rocker, of sorts, getting into bands like Zep, Purple and Lizzy, around this time. So when I discovered, via a neighbour, that you could buy - or better still, make your own - lead figures, I was very excited. My neighbour, a certain Jason Russell, had, if I recall correctly, a collection of Prince August Napoleonics, that he had cast and painted himself. Seeing these round his house, all nicely painted and lined up on proper display shelves... it blew my gasket!

My dad always was a hands on kind of guy, building and making things around the house. He was keen and supportive, and bought me some Prince August moulds, and the other necessary bits and bobs. And I was soon in hob-heaven, melting little ingots of lead, talc'ing up my moulds, and running off batches of 25mm Waterloo-era Napoleonics. Rather oddly - probably purely down to stock at the local games and hobby shop - I started with a Netherlander mould!



It wasn't long after this that I started to occasionally buy Miniature Wargames magazine, and from that point onwards I was looking to get into the hobby properly. Around this time I convinced a few pals to form a wargames club at school, and not long after that, I began collecting 15mm Napoleonics. Mainly Minifigs at first, followed by a few Essex, and then some fabulous Battle Honours. A bit later I also got some 1/300 German WWII armour by Heroics & Ros.

Diorama Fantasies - unrealised then and now!



A picture from André Rudolph's Facebook page, showing one rather brilliant view (of many) from his Prince August based 25mm Waterloo diorama: my childhood dream realised!


When I was very young we'd had a lodger or two, one of whom, along with my dad, had built some fantastic models tanks and such like. This seeded a desire to build beautiful models, as well as collect figures. Most of their models had been WWII German armour. This would eventually lead to my building a fair bit of Airfix and Tamiya WWII stuff.

But right from the outset tho', with the Airfix set and then the Prince August stuff, my little wargaming heart and mind had been fixed on Waterloo, and even way back then I dreamed of one day building a diorama of the battle. I have now found that a German guy, AndrĂ© Rudolph, has actually realised this ambition (see above pic, and here), using Prince August figures no less. Well done that man! There's also an Airfix Waterloo diorama (there are probably many such), at The Royal Green Jackets Museum, at the Peninsula Barracks in Winchester.

And then there are Captain Siborne's dioramas: the whole battlefield depicted in something near 1/300th at the National Army Museum in Chelsea, and the Leeds Armoury 'small model', depicting the charge of the Household & Union Cavalry Brigades, on a scale, I believe, near to what we think of as 25mm. What with 2015 hoving rapidly into view, and the 200th anniversary of Waterloo, I'll certainly return to this theme in a much fuller way at some point. I may then post a few of the pics I've taken of the two Siborne Waterloo models.

For now here's just one pic from the Leeds Armoury 'Small Model':


I know the above pic ain't the greatest photo ever taken, but I love how the diorama looks quite like what one imagines the real battlefield might've looked like: a French infantry battalion reaches the crest of the rise, wading through a cornfield, their neatly dressed lines starting to crumble in the face of fire from the British infantry lines, visible in the background. Siborne's models are brilliant, and his story is fascinating. I'll definitely return to this subject later.

A question of scale - bringing it up to date:

So, by the time I sold off my wargaming collection, in my mid-twenties, I'd collected figures in varying periods and quantities in scales ranging from 1/300th 'micro-armour' up to the 1/32 Tamiya stuff. The bulk of my collection had been in 15mm, 25mm and 1/300th.

Returning to the hobby as an adult, and visiting Salute and buying a few magazines again, I was now more interested in Napoleon against Russia, as opposed to Waterloo (it was circa 2012, after all!). But I faced the conundrum of where to restart. The bigger scales, like 15mm and 25/28mm, looked prohibitively expensive, and then there was the issue of space. Where would I ultimately put all the figures, never mind a gaming table?

It was from these cogitations that this blog was born.

At that first return to Salute, in 2012, I was accompanied by my wonderful wife, Teresa. She has been so supportive of my return to the interests of my childhood, and wargaming in particular, that I am quite touched and elated. She would rather I collected larger scale figures, and went so far as to buy me some Front Rank AWI miniatures... bless her!

So I'll dedicate this blog to her, and start the images of my own work with a few pics of the figures as they currently stand.




As can be seen, they currently stand upon sliced wine-cork podiums! These were the first wargame figures I'd painted in over two decades, and, whilst nearly finished, remain unbased. I felt that starting at the 40mm scale might be best. And boy was it hard work to get back into it. As a perfectionist who always feels he falls short, I was perhaps a touch disappointed at my first efforts. But you have to start somewhere. It was almost as frustrating at times as it was overall enjoyable. But, in the end, I'm satisfied with them as a way back into the discipline of painting.

But I felt that in order to put together forces on the scale I wanted to - I aim to 're-fight' Smolensk and Maloyaroslavets first - I'd need to do so in a smaller scale, in order to collect large enough forces affordably, and ultimately make suitable terrain, etc. So in the end I've opted to collect armies in 10mm for Maloyaroslavets, and 6mm for Smolensk. Once this was decided, which I did, I believe, at Salute 2012, I started making my lists and my purchases.

My next few posts will cover what I bought and why, as well as my first attempts at painting smaller scale figures. I do hope this will be of interest to some of you out there in the blogosphere!? Please do leave me some feedback in the comments area.