My first British foot battalion represents the 15th (East Yorkshire) regiment, as a tribute to the area where I've lived for the last 40 years.
The title of this post is what these guys might have said in 1815 in a Hull accent.
Thursday, 7 December 2017
Friday, 3 November 2017
Easy as A, B , C
In my last post I indicated I hadn't had much time for painting recently due to my horse riding activities and other stuff, so this week I've concentrated on re-furbishing some already painted figures I acquired from eBay. They just needed a slight touch-up and a coat of gloss varnish before basing / flocking, and here is the result.
I'm designating them RHA troops A, B and C.
I don't have enough draught horses, limbers and drivers for these yet, that said my playing surface is only 4ft x 4ft so it will look a little less cluttered without horse teams.
I also have a couple of Foot Artillery crews ready to paint, by mounting gunners individually rather than gluing them to the gun base I can mix and match to suit the scenario.
Cheers
Dave
Monday, 30 October 2017
Just horsing around
I haven't made much progress on the wargames front recently, mainly because I've been spending a lot of time with this gorgeous lady :-
Meet George, my 16.1hh Oldenburg mare (I know she's got a boy's name, it's a long story).
But British Summer Time ended yesterday, so the dark evenings mean I will be devoting more time to the leadpile for the next few months.
Watch this space for some horse-related wargame stuff coming soon!
Meet George, my 16.1hh Oldenburg mare (I know she's got a boy's name, it's a long story).
But British Summer Time ended yesterday, so the dark evenings mean I will be devoting more time to the leadpile for the next few months.
Watch this space for some horse-related wargame stuff coming soon!
Saturday, 14 October 2017
KGL Conundrum
When I bought these guys they were billed as Kings German Legion.
I'm not sure the yellow Regimental colour is correct. According to the Osprey KGL reference book the standards followed 'British practice'. So as all KGL regiments had dark blue facings, surely the Regimental standard should be blue? Any advice gratefully received!
As part of the touching up process I had thought of repainting the facings yellow and have this unit represent the 15th (East Yorkshire) regiment as that's where I live, but research shows they were stationed in the West Indies from 1805 to after 1815, so to use them in the Peninsular / Waterloo campaigns would mean they are a bit off station!
I'm not sure the yellow Regimental colour is correct. According to the Osprey KGL reference book the standards followed 'British practice'. So as all KGL regiments had dark blue facings, surely the Regimental standard should be blue? Any advice gratefully received!
As part of the touching up process I had thought of repainting the facings yellow and have this unit represent the 15th (East Yorkshire) regiment as that's where I live, but research shows they were stationed in the West Indies from 1805 to after 1815, so to use them in the Peninsular / Waterloo campaigns would mean they are a bit off station!
Friday, 6 October 2017
Flock this for a game of soldiers!
Just experimenting with basing, thought I'd share and ask for comments.
Middle pic is how I used to paint bases back in the day, I thought bright green brought out the uniform colours nicely. Back then I used old cornflake boxes as the base, then I moved on to used beer mats, they were excellent! We didn't have laser cut MDF in those days.
Left pic is humbol matt green #80, less garish but still quite old school. Nice and simple.
Right pic is the same with a sprinkling of grass effect flock from Hobbycraft. Not exactly Peter Gilder standard basing but effective nonetheless.
The figures are standing on a Hobbycraft green grass mat which I was thinking of using as a basis for some terrain modules. Nothing fancy, will probably have contour block hills and very basic river / road sections.
I think I'll go for the flocked look.
Cheers
Dave
Middle pic is how I used to paint bases back in the day, I thought bright green brought out the uniform colours nicely. Back then I used old cornflake boxes as the base, then I moved on to used beer mats, they were excellent! We didn't have laser cut MDF in those days.
Left pic is humbol matt green #80, less garish but still quite old school. Nice and simple.
Right pic is the same with a sprinkling of grass effect flock from Hobbycraft. Not exactly Peter Gilder standard basing but effective nonetheless.
The figures are standing on a Hobbycraft green grass mat which I was thinking of using as a basis for some terrain modules. Nothing fancy, will probably have contour block hills and very basic river / road sections.
I think I'll go for the flocked look.
Cheers
Dave
Tuesday, 26 September 2017
Braunschweig verwirrung, teil zwei
Had a few suggestions on my previous 'Brunswick bewilderment' post ranging from Hinchcliffe to Scruby so I thought I'd add a comparison pic.
I'm fairly sure the guys on the left are original HH (except the one with the missing bayonet, which is quite small and might be a homecast copy?), on the right are some Scruby's. So the mystery figures in the middle are a little bigger than HH and quite a bit bigger than Scruby.I'm leaning towards original Hinchcliffe before Peter Gilder started producing his big, chunky 25mm range.
I'm fairly sure the guys on the left are original HH (except the one with the missing bayonet, which is quite small and might be a homecast copy?), on the right are some Scruby's. So the mystery figures in the middle are a little bigger than HH and quite a bit bigger than Scruby.I'm leaning towards original Hinchcliffe before Peter Gilder started producing his big, chunky 25mm range.
Saturday, 23 September 2017
Brunswick bewilderment
I bought these guys as 'Brunswick Avante Garde' on ebay, clearly not Hinton Hunt, maybe Minifigs S range? Any info gratefully received. On temporary bases at the moment pending any re-touching/re-painting.
And the officer looks more like a later Minifigs 25mm casting. So much taller than the other ranks, I guess I can justify this by the fact that the officer corps would have been better fed than the peasants recruited from the forests and mountains for the Jaeger corps. They are painted in a quite dark neutral grey/green so I guess they could qualify equally as Waterloo period Avante Garde Jaegers (both types) as well as Peninsular period Oels Jaegers.
I always thought the Black Brunswickers' early history would make an interesting wargame campaign. A fighting retreat across northern Germany to the mouth of the Weser where they were embarked by the Royal Navy before entering British service. Shame about their subsequent poor reputation in the Peninsular (famous for rate of desertion, probably due to the fact that replacements came from German/other PoWs and better quality recruits went to the KGL). But they seem to have redeemed themselves in the 100 days.
And the officer looks more like a later Minifigs 25mm casting. So much taller than the other ranks, I guess I can justify this by the fact that the officer corps would have been better fed than the peasants recruited from the forests and mountains for the Jaeger corps. They are painted in a quite dark neutral grey/green so I guess they could qualify equally as Waterloo period Avante Garde Jaegers (both types) as well as Peninsular period Oels Jaegers.
I always thought the Black Brunswickers' early history would make an interesting wargame campaign. A fighting retreat across northern Germany to the mouth of the Weser where they were embarked by the Royal Navy before entering British service. Shame about their subsequent poor reputation in the Peninsular (famous for rate of desertion, probably due to the fact that replacements came from German/other PoWs and better quality recruits went to the KGL). But they seem to have redeemed themselves in the 100 days.
Tuesday, 19 September 2017
Still learning how to do this blogging thing and no progress on the wargaming front in the last couple of days, so as it's 'speak like a pirate day' I thought I'd share a little pirate-related joke.
Q Why did the parrot sat on the pirate's shoulder say 'pieces of seven' ?
A It was a parroty error.
Sorry! As a professional IT nerd I find this funny, feel free to disagree and reply with better jokes.
Q Why did the parrot sat on the pirate's shoulder say 'pieces of seven' ?
A It was a parroty error.
Sorry! As a professional IT nerd I find this funny, feel free to disagree and reply with better jokes.
Monday, 18 September 2017
Back in the mid 60s I was an avid builder of Airfix plastic kits. One Christmas I was given a Roman Bireme ship model (Revell / Heller?) along with a box of Airfix Romans, which I was captivated by, but had no idea what to do with. So I went to the local library and took out 'Tackle Model Soldiers This Way' by Donald F Featherstone. I was immediately hooked. Through the late 60s / early 70s I mainly collected Airfix plastics (2s/3d a box for 40 - 50 figures as opposed to 1s/3d for a Hinton Hunt infantry figure, on 2s/6d a week pocket money it was a no-brainer). Then came University, marriage, mortgage and career,so wargaming faded into the distant background. Now at an age when retirement is looming I've decided it's time to scratch that itch again. I have a reasonable number of vintage 20mm Napoleonics from various manufacturers mostly gleaned from ebay over the last 2 years, the original idea was to strip and repaint but for now I'm just re-basing so I can field a couple of armies and start gaming in a reasonable timescale. If it's painted and looks OK from 2 feet away then it will do for now!
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