Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Looking forward to Shows

So, it's been a while, once again. For this I apologise, but then there really hasn't been much to talk about. The paintbrushes have remained dry for the last month or so to be honest. Sometimes life just gets busy. Especially as it has been the school holidays. So, what can I talk about? Well, a nice surprise came in the post this week, the models from the Bad Squiddo Kickstarter I ordered.

Bad Squiddo Annie very kindly popped I'm extra colouring pencils and colouring book into my parcel as I got a quiz question right on a Sunday morning coffee chat, which will mean myself and youngest can have a book each and do some colouring together. The colouring book is full of awesome pictures of Bad Squiddo minis, I particularly like the montage on the last page.

Gaming wise, I'm still playing Pathfinder with the Illustrious Opponent and friends. In fact currently running a slightly longer than one shot myself where the players are all Goblins who have found they have the run of the dungeon they are supposed to be keeping tidy. It took a good couple of nights prep work to write, so I'm glad that my friends seem to be enjoying it. Plus it gives the Illustrious Opponent a well deserved break from his usual GM duties.

For those of you reading from abroad (yep the Moldovians are still reading this, for which I am grateful) Lockdown life in the UK has started to get back to normal, well a little. I am going in to the office a couple of days a week and have ventured out on a couple of occasions to a few well organised safe public events. (Still being cautious though and doing regular at home Covid tests). I went to a Knitting and Wool show at Newbury racecourse with Mrs Lead at the weekend, which made me think of our own local Wargame show that normally occurs at the same venue. Sadly this year our show has not taken place, a decision I am sure the organisers didn't take lightly and I understand why. There are however, some shows to look forward to later in the year and they will be here before we know it. 
First we have South London Warlords' Salute on November 13th. They have released the list of demonstration games here. Briefly, games of note I am looking forward to are:

Bad Squiddo games Guinea Pigs and Bunny Rabbits dukeing it out in a post apocalyptic wasteland.

Crooked Dice 7TV Pulp TV. I have bought a fair few Crooked Dice models, but never tried their rules, now is my chance.

Eavier metal speed painting competition. The brother-in-law and I had immense fun doing this on our last visit to the show. A must this year.

The Silver Bayonet from Osprey Games. You know I love an Osprey ruleset. I've got to try this new one, after all I already have plenty of Napoleonic models.

South London Warlords Aliens Anniversary. I suspect this game will be popular, but if I get a chance I might have a go.

Following closely on the heels from Salute, the Wargames Association of Reading present Warfare 2021 on the 27th and 28th of November. This year not actually taking place in Reading though, but at Ascot Racecourse. I understand why, their usual venue isn't available and I know for a fact a racecourse makes a great venue.

 I'm wondering how well attended some of these shows will be, on the one hand people will be excited to get out and see each other again, but then will all these delayed shows all crammed together at the end of the year and people being careful cause footfall to be lower. We shall see, I for one will be excited, but also armed with a face mask and plenty of hand sanitiser.

So, maybe I shall see you at a show, you won't know its me unless I say something though. Maybe I should invest in a t-shirt or something...

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Another guest post from the Distinguished Opponent

One of the tricky things when writing a blog about your progress with painting toy soldiers is you have to actually paint toy soldiers, all the time. Otherwise you run out of things to write about. Forced breaks due to surgery aside I have done pretty well to keep up and publish at least one post a month over the last couple of years which has meant I have been pretty prolific in my painting too. It's nice to get a little break sometimes though, so when my brother-in-law Tom asked if he could hijack my blog to tell the world about his latest project I immediately agreed. So I shall keep the introduction short and pass over to the Distinguished Opponent.


Greetings Acolytes of the Dice Gods, once again it is I the Distinguished Opponent usurping this blog from your usual writer because I cannot be bothered to start my own.  Like last time this is going to be a long one so grab yourself a coffee, and if you can, why not get our host one as well, I’m sure he would really appreciate it.

 

Last time I was allowed to inflict my presence upon you dear readers, I told you the unhappy tale of how I tried to get some skeleton crocodiles from Dark Fable Miniatures but couldn’t owing to the sites owner having recently passed away.  I also told you how the owner of Dragon Bait Miniatures delivered the sad news and that he was going to add Dark Fables range to his online store, ensuring that Dark Fables legacy will not be lost to us like too many others.  Well at the time I decided to look at Dragon Baits store to see if they had anything I could use for my Undead army.  They did not, instead they had a range of minis called Steam Bait that I fell instantly in love with and was determined to have at all cost.  The Steam Bait range is women dressed as British soldiers from the late Victorian era.  It is clear looking at the paint job on the website that their design was inspired by the film Zulu, lovingly referred to in my family as ‘THAT FILM’.  It is easy to understand why with the bright red uniforms and white pith helmets, even Games Workshop was inspired by ‘THAT FILM’ when they created the Praetorian Guards.

 

Now as almost all of you are understandably unaware of, when I’m not smearing paint on small expensive lumps of metal, plastic and resin I earn my daily bread as a curator in a military museum.  This means that knowing the history of British Army uniforms is quite literally my job.  Now the quality of the minis sculpts means that either by accident, or design, the minis helmets look like a cross between a pith helmet and a home service helmet.  Because of this I decided to paint most of my ladies wearing home service helmets rather than pith helmets.  This opened up a wide range of colours that I could use rather than red and khaki.  I also came up with names and nicknames for each regiment...Well what do you do to pass the time while waiting for the wash to dry?  Let’s talk about the infantry soldiers first.

 


The South-West Warwickshire Regiment “Shakespeare’s Sisters”

These were the first ladies I painted up.  The officer is actually from the rocket artillery set but I pulled her out of that group as I needed her to make up the numbers.  The flag came from Maverick Models.  They produce many different Napoleonic flags for various scales printed on either paper, stickers or in this case fabric. 

 


The Cambridgeshire Light Infantry “The Footlights”

In case you don’t know, the home service helmet worn by infantry regiments was blue, while light infantry regiments wore green helmets.  Like nearly all the minis I painted, I chose to paint the ribbons on the helmets the same colour as the facings (the collars and cuffs).  For these I wanted to use Cambridge Blue as the facing colour, hence the regiments name.  Unfortunately Cambridge Blue is very close to green in tone and would have been lost on the helmets.  To make matters worse I only realised a way around this problem when I was painting the last of my minis.

 


The Central African Border Regiment ‘The Cabbie Drivers’

Felt I needed a unit from the Empire so I painted these up as African soldiers.  The uniforms are Vallejo English Uniform, a paint I am rapidly falling in love with.  It covers nicely, dries smooth and is just a lovely colour.  Does anybody know if they do a range of Captain Scarlet minis?  I really want to paint Captain Ochre using this colour.

 


The Queens Royal Rifle Brigade ‘The Quick and Slows”

I used the officer and bugler from the command set for these Riflewomen.  Worth mentioning at this point I used grey’s and yellow for the metals as I didn’t think true metallic metal paint would work with these figures.  I also did the metals as a very basic non-metallic metal as 1) I felt that having anything other than a basic NMM would not look right and 2) I am not very good at NMM.

 


The Worksop Rifle Volunteers “The Mud Maids”

As I said earlier knowing the history of British uniforms is my job and I could not pass up the idea of having some rifle volunteers with grey uniforms.  Once again the officer was pulled from the artillery set to make up the numbers.  As for the regiments name, I freely admit that watching Maid Marian and Her Merry Men when I was painting these ones may have influenced me somewhat.

 


The Isle of Man Regiment “The No Tails”

Decided to paint these women wearing foreign service dress, as I didn’t want too many wearing redcoats.  I also chose to give them black skirts to avoid confusion with my African ladies.   I was originally planning to paint these minis as Scots wearing tartan skirts.  Fortunately good sense broke out of its prison and stopped me.

 


The Berwick-upon-Tweed Regiment “The Boarder Jumpers”

This was the last group of infantry soldiers I painted and I decided to do something a little different with these.  Here’s a weird thing about the British Army, there is a rule and there is always one regiment that does not follow that rule, always.  In the case of my minis the colours of the ribbons on the helmets always match the colours of the facings.  Not these girls, their facings are teal while their ribbons are white.  It was after completing these that I realised I should have done this for my light infantry women instead.  There was some swearing when I worked this out.

 



Well that’s the infantry now for the cavalry.  Design wise these models resemble the Household Cavalry so I decided to paint half like Lifeguards and the rest as Blues and Royals.  The guidon was purchased along with the flag from Maverick Models..  The guidon itself was the same scale as the flag so it was going to be half a centimetre smaller than what I wanted, however when I put my order in I got an e-mail telling me what the final size of the flags was going to be and was asked if I wanted to make any changes before going to print.  I get the feeling the owner of Maverick Models has had one too many complaints from people who didn’t measure their flag poles properly or checked the size of a guidon compared to a flag.  In my case while I was happy with the original size I chose to increase it, which was done at no extra cost.  In short ten out of ten would buy from again.  Finally there are no funny names or nicknames for these soldiers as my creativity gave out on me...sorry.

 


For my rocket artillery batteries I chose to paint them with dark blue uniforms with red facings similar to the Royal Artillery.  I chose to paint one battery as a Regular Army team and the other as a Volunteer Artillery team.  The way to tell them apart is the volunteer battery’s members wear silver helmet badges while the regular battery’s wear gold.  I also gave the members of the volunteer battery grey or greying hair.  Both batteries share a single ammunition mule.

 


Private Alison Sloper. 

These are my favourite models in the Steam Bait range.  Both the mule and the long suffering soldier have so much character to them.  I chose to paint the soldier so she looks like a member of the Army Service Corps, dark blue (on paper in real life it looks black) with white facings. 

 


General Lady Sale and Bob

The last mini to talk about is the general herself.  I chose to give her a white mount rather than the brown used with the cavalry minis.  Credit goes to my mother for suggesting the name for the general which was too good to not use.  This also meant I had to name the mount Bob, it’s not a reference to Blackadder.

 

So those are my ladies.  I cannot deny I had great fun painting these girls and I am still smiling every time I look at them.  I have shared some pictures of them on a number of discord servers I belong to and the feedback has been lovely.  I feel the best way to close out this entry is to share one of those comments that I feel sums up what this hobby and this blog is all about.

“Any model or item that feels cool or even just vaguely interesting and inspires a sense of accomplishment when finished/used in a conversion is an object that can be collected with pride :)”

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Kobolds, kobolds, kobolds!


On our adventures in these mysterious lands on one occasion we happened upon these strange mischievous creatures dwelling in a cave at the base of a dormant volcano. Possessing some form of intelligence, these small reptilian bipeds seemed to converse with each other in a language that sounded similar to the loud calls of the large flying, fire breathing reptiles that are so reminiscent of the dragons of our myths. Their intelligence became obvious when one of our local guides pointed out the intricate traps they had set up to defend their nests that included trip wires, falling boulders and even one instance of a rather extraordinary example of the shape shifting creature we had previously only heard about on our travels known to the locals as a mimic. This mimic had against all laws of nature, managed to manipulate its own hide and shape to that of a rather handsome looking armoire.
Their society seems to revolve around the worship of the aformentioned dragons. According to our guide, escalation in the ranks of the society relies mostly on an individual bearing the most "dragon-like" features. In fact the apparent leader of this group seemed to even have wings of her own. Whether they were practical in use, we were never able to find out. Our brief visit was cut short when the tribe discovered our party observing them and seemed to decide to attack for no reason. Despite being diminitive in nature, they made up for this in numbers and we were soon in danger of being overwhelmed unless we made a quick exit. Luckily it was still daylight outside as we left the caverns, the creatures were not keen on venturing out under the glaring sun. We lost only one of our local guides in this escapade, a Mr Jack Lightfoot, quite violently to the afforementioned armoire. 
 
Extract from "My extraordinary adventures in the otherworldly lands through the thaumaturgical portal." by Sir Frederick Hawkins, Naturalist and Gamehunter.

 
These kobolds are from Worlds in Miniature and were a free sample to review on my blog. They are 3D printed in resin and came with mdf bases.
 
 
They take paint really well, I undercoated by hand with a watered down white and it took just one coat. Some resin models don't take paint well until at least two coats even after a good scrubbing with soapy water. With these models, this was not the case.
 
 
 
 
 
At first I thought they wouldn't take me long to paint at all, but I ended up taking my time to really enjoy picking out the details. They are full of character and will make a great addition to my dungeon crawl monster collection.
 

I wanted to keep their look quite bright, so I avoided ink for the main body. Instead I painted a base orange colour and then just highlighted up through yellow and white. The only inking is reserved for the leather bindings on the ankles and wrists. I kept the bases simple as I will probably use them on dungeon tiles, so they would look weird with flock or tufts added.

I was looking at my website stats and realised I missed the three year mark on this blog. I started back in May 2018 and I'm still waffling on. Bizarrely some of you are still reading too. I'm sure the 1200 views from Sweden this week must be some kind of hacking attempt (or maybe its genuine, I mean I painted a Viking? Is there a mass need for the Swedes to see painted busts of vikings?) Overall though I'm chuffed to see that my blog gets readership and not just via my endless spamming on Facebook, some peeps even wander in via Bing. (Even Bing's bizarre search algorithms find me.) Obviously I'm still small fry in the world of wargame blogging, but hey who knows what may happen in another three years...
 
If you have got this far and enjoy reading my blog, why not let me know by making a small donation, you can buy me a coffee here. Thanks, it is very much appreciated.  

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Viking Commission

Well hello, long time no chat. How are you? All good? Great. Its been a while hasn't it? Let me fill you in. 

Just before lockdown I had a referral for a minor operation, nothing serious, but it needed doing. Well, with hospitals being busy and it not being life threatening, it got delayed until this year. So last month my local hospital got in touch, they could fit me in. A week of Covid test, followed by self isolation and then a day visit for the operation and I'm all fixed. This then did however mean a couple of weeks recuperation. No work I hear you cry, plenty of time for painting? Well, sadly no, I couldn't sit upright at a table at all, so no hobbying for yours truly. 
I am definitely recovered now though, so painting has resumed. My first post Op project to be finished is something I was asked to paint for someone else. Not my usual project, a slightly larger scale bust of a viking. This was again printed on an Elegoo Mars msla printer and is a pretty impressive print. The print came out in four parts, body, head, axe and pony tail. 

Previously I have been apprehensive about painting busts and larger scales, thinking I wouldn't know how to paint the larger expanses of colour without it looking dull, but actually there is enough detail in this that it isn't a problem. I mixed up techniques, drybrushing up to highlights only on the hair and beard, inking on the fur and skin. 

The larger scale is actually freeing because I can finally paint eyes without adapting the "stab and hope" technique that I adopt in 28mm scale. Instead I really enjoyed putting detail into the steely gaze and getting his pupils actually looking in a particular direction.

So there he is in all his grizzly, grim faced glory. I might look at painting something else in this scale, it makes a nice change to be able to paint details without having to squint. As the owner said, "It's amazing how much 'life' can be released from a simple lump of plastic...."

If you have got this far and enjoy reading my blog, why not let me know by making a small donation, you can buy me a coffee here. Thanks, it is very much appreciated. 

Monday, May 24, 2021

Another Space Marine, Dagnammit.

As I stated in my last post, I used to be a lazy painter. My days of playing warhammer was all about the game rather than the painting, so my armies didn't look that amazing on the table. I had a Skaven Army that included a massive slave unit of sixty models. All I had done to paint them was spray them brown, paint each nose black and the end of their spears silver. Oh and flock the bases, jobs a good'un. My first 40k army was actually Blood Angels. They were so badly painted I have actually overpainted or sold most of them, so apart from a terrible Mephiston Librarian on a Bike conversion I still have I technically don't have any Blood Angels.

I recently ventured into the town centre for a visit for the first time in a long while for my first Covid Vaccination (Yay!!) Whilst there I decided to get some hobby supplies. I still haven't touched my Stargrave plastics as I don't want to waste them, I am saving them as a treat. We have a small independent store in town that mostly sells airfix type kits so I picked up some Tamiya plastic cement from there. I have good memories of that brush on poly that GW had back in the nineties that just bonded the two surfaces together without getting any gloopiness everywhere. Apparently this stuff is just like that, so my Stargrave plastics will get the same VIP treatment. I really want to get these plastics right, almost to the point where I am scared to actually build them. Not having definitely decided on what any particular rule system I am using them for (I didn't actually buy the Stargrave book) I'm not sure what I'm going to arm each model with. Do I go for lots of variety for a skirmish type games or do I make whole units of models armed with similar weaponry? I also grabbed a few new texture paints to try out.

I also thought I would pop into my local GW store to get some paints and another painting handle. When I first saw these painting handles I thought they were a waste of money, but then I got one for my youngest as he was struggling when painting to hold the models. Then I'd actually started borrowing it myself and found it really useful so now we have one each. (Never too long in the beard to pick up new techniques.)
Whilst in there I showed the store manager a picture of my latest Space Marine paint job and he was impressed (I know, I know, it's his job to be nice.) and he asked what I was going to paint next. Well the store is having it's anniversary soon and they are having a couple of competitions including a conversion competition. GW only bits or green stuff allowed. So, I decided to go right back to the beginning and have a play with some green stuff. Could I make a new style Primaris Marine look like an old school Blood Angel. Well, I don't think it's gonna win the competition, but I had fun making him.

Oh and of course it had to have an old school green trim on the base, nothing else would do.

Paints used:

Coat D'arms. Blood Red, Bone, White, Grass Green, Ink Wash Armour

Citadel. Abaddon Black, Caliban Green, Eshin Grey, Retributor Armour, Grey Knights Steel, Steel Legion Drab, Flash Fitz Yellow, Baal Red Wash, Brown Ink

Monday, April 26, 2021

Painting Space Marines

So regular readers will know I'm no longer a GW fan, I am definitely not up to speed on the current rules, or background of their systems. I'm not anti-GW at all. I buy their paints and I will peruse their shelves to see if anything jumps out at me, although I'll be honest, a lot of the new style models with their insistence of using lots of negative space and delicately balanced "stringy" bits isn't to my taste. (just me, I know I have no reason not to like it, I just have no idea how anyone transports any of it safely!) 

There are a large number of people who look back on the nineties as the "Golden Age" of Warhammer, whole groups of people look back with tinted glasses on what was once my teenage years and the "best of times" rather than the "end of times". (Okay seriously, that is enough with the quotations.) There is an excellent fanzine out there here dedicated to those days of goblin green edged bases and cardboard standees for that larger model in your army you just can't afford. 

There is an argument to be said that us Longbeards need to let go, like the middle aged man with his car on his drive he had when he was a teenager, tinkering with it every weekend to keep it running because it is a classic. When in reality, it's just a piece of metal from the eighties. Things improve, technologies change. When I was a kid embracing the latest 40K rules coming out there were probably Longbeards at the time tutting and stroking their facial hair, lamenting the lost days of Rogue Trader. So, maybe things have improved?

The last time I played Warhammer 40K the rules were in the midst of a trend that bigger is better. Apocalypse was the trend so all games had to be bring everything you have to the table. I had a Space Marine army and so had increased it to the size of an entire company and then some. I had a lot of Space Marines, mostly painted as quickly as possible to get them on the table. The game took all day for us to play, turns would last for up to two hours, the rules were basically skewed towards whatever the latest new models were, so my Space Marine army suffered horribly. I packed my lads away carefully in their foam trays and I was done with them.

More recently GW did one of those magazine runs where part one is £1.99 to entice you in and the first issue came with three new style Space Marines, a brush and three pots of paint. As one of those colours was black and paint costs more than that per pot in store, I proceeded to buy three copies just for the paint. The Marines were packed away for a rainy day.

This week I decided it's been long enough and to see if I could paint Space Marines any better, also to see if it the models are any better. My painting style has changed over the years so I thought it would be an interesting experiment. I also read somewhere recently where someone suggested that we should try not to compare our painted models to others across the internet but rather our own earlier attempts. That way you can see your own improvement. So, here they are.



I've gone for an Ultramarines colour scheme for a mass appeal so I can use them to show my painting ability. It's amazing how many paints you actually use though for what initially seems a simple colour scheme. As an exercise I took note for once in the actual paints I used:

Undercoat: Coat D'arms white
Main armour blue: Citadel Macragge Blue, Citadel Blue wash (if you don't happen to have a twenty year old pot of this Coat D'arms do a similar ink blue wash), highlight with Citadel Russ Grey.
Helmets: Coat D'arms white with a wash of Coat D'arms light brown super shader, Citadel Eshin grey for the eyes.
Sergeant head: Coat D'arms horse tone brown, then drybrushed with Citadel Cadian Fleshtone. Hair is Citadel Sunburst yellow with a glaze of Coat D'arms Golden Yellow.
Boltguns: Coat D'arms gun metal and horse tone brown with respective washes of Coat D'arms ink armour wash and Citadel Brown ink. Citadel Abaddon Black for the middle body.
Brass trimmings: Citadel Retributor Armour with Citadel Gryphonne Sepia.
Purity seals: Coat D'arms Blood Red and Bone. Washed with the same Gryphonne Sepia.
Base: Vallejo thick Mud.

There you go, 19 pots of paint for a "simple" paint scheme. I think I've come a long way since I first started painting Space Marines.

What do I think of the models? Well they are a lot less fiddly to put together than they used to be, this might be partly due to the fact they are bigger but that is explained by the fact that apparantly they are a new strain of superior advanced Space Marine. I due wonder if the larger sculpts came first then the backstory was invented as an excuse. They do feel more like the genetically superior beings that I always imagined when reading the novels though. The original guys never seemed to tower over their guardsman counterparts.
I fished out a couple of my old guys to do the comparison. 

Well, they are clearly a lot taller, but these are Primaris Marines, an improvement on the original geneseed. Maybe the larger model came before the story, maybe not, who knows. I actually kinda like them. Has my painting improved? I'd like to think so, mainly not due to any increase in skill but in care and attention. I spent probably ten times as long on each model as I would have back the first time. I certainly couldn't paint another full company of Marines at this rate, not if I didn't want to go crazy. Nevertheless I don't think I'm going to go out and buy the latest 40K rules and get playing again, but to be honest, when I first painted Space Marines I think 90% of my hobby time was about the game, the painting was a means to an ends, these days, this old Grognard likes to take his time painting a model, if I get to roll some dice now and then that's just a bonus.

Talking of bonus content, those of you who did the maths, will know that if I bought three copies of the magazine I would have nine marines, well I first painted up just a five man squad, then I thought I would have a little play with a tiny conversion by fishing out an old power fist from my bits box. (Yep, I never throw any spare bits out.) I think it fits quite well, in fact in the old marine models I felt the power fist looked too big, here it looks pretty good.