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Showing posts with label WW2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WW2. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 02, 2022

Photodump Vol.1: Historicals

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Oh hey there, did you miss me? No.... Cool.

If you don't visit Instagram, here's some of what I have been up to.  The intention was to keep the blog for things that require a bit more depth, but to be honest, I never sit down and write those things up at the minute anyway!

So here's the round up of Historical/quasi-historical miniatures from the last few months:

Two more 15mm Bavarian Battalions; IIRC 3rd & 4th fusiliers

Col. Adam Muir of the 41st; Upper Canada 1812

Imagi-Nations Gebrovian Regiment.  15mm Warrior Miniatures

US infantry platoon.  Italy 1943-44.  mixed 20mm.

The Stuart is a rescue of one of a pair I've owned since childhood!

Stug III G.  PSC kit in 1/72 with full treatment of techniques!

So having got the Biblical stuff put to one side, I went off and blasted out some uniformed troops and added to the WW2 collection from mostly the leftovers pile.

However, I am intent on starting a new front for WW2 in 2022, and going down a different early war route.  In a somewhat related regard, I produced a little diorama for an online painting challenge; which gives a clear indication what I have in mind:

 
Figures are proving a little hard to source, but things are progressing.  This aside I have a couple of historical ideas to start in 2022, and no end of projects to try and finish!

Next time, all the Fantasy stuff.

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Wednesday, December 01, 2021

Horsch Car and German support

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I knocked out some additional forces for my WW2 Germans, after an actual game, in which it became apparent they were actually too well provisioned with anti-tank support, and needed something on roll that was weaker!  I also took the excuse to get a Horsch Car kit from PSC and have a play around with it.

 
 
 
Pak 36

MG42 and cobbled together crew

I think these are some of the last Valiant German Infantry in the old moulds that I have.  The new in scale models are probably better but their price-point isn't.  The Pak is one of the Zvezda Art of Tactic pieces, and although more early-mid war, its a nice crisp piece, that will sit well with my 2nd line infantry regiment.  Lastly the Car features my now standard weathering approaches, using oils, pigment powders and wet effects.

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Monday, September 07, 2020

Saving you the Painting - More eBay

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Pumping out the WW2 at the minute.  The latest batch have been done a week or so, but I kept forgetting to add them on here.  Early War Germans in 20mm:

Everything 

Check the listing here: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/333703628720 

These are classic Airfix miniatures, and I think the largely stand up very well, if a little smaller than most modern makes.

Command

A section (one of three)

These represent a Full platoon (with some losses) circa 1940-42, or a full strength Platoon from late 42 to 1943.  Alternatively they would work well as a second line or fortification unit into 1944.

The tank is a Panzer IV Ausf. D from the HäT/Armorfast range.  For a 'simple' kit it still has some 25 parts, only the running gear is simplified.  Lots of painting and weathering went in to this fun little model, and it gives the platoon some punch!

Dig that splatter, chipping and rust...

More product, and hopefully more into the gaming kitty.

Fingers crossed!


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Sunday, September 06, 2020

Saving old Soldiers

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Sometimes we get a chance to have a second chance at life; I know I certainly have, and well, things would be very different had I not.  But let's keep it light, eh?  In this case I'm talking about figure painting.  

With my German WW2 forces of a more than usable size now, I took the time to look at my Americans, and found them a bit light on infantry.  Or rather, many of those I had left were in a pretty sorry state.  

Rebased but otherwise unmodified from 30+ years ago.

These were amongst the very first figures I can recall painting 'properly', probably around age 15.  We all have to start somewhere of course, but these were done with all of four colours, in Enamels, with clearly little reference to historical accuracy, and only passable efforts at staying within the lines.  What can you expect for some of your first models; few of us start out great, and painting like most skills doubtless adheres to the old adage that to get good at a skill requires around 10,000 hours of practice.

Well a quick trip to the calculator, suggests I've had around 19,500 hours of practice since then, so it felt like it would be a good idea to give these gentlemen the paint-jobs they deserved, rather than the one they'd got all those years ago.  I had at some point in their lives at least made a passing attempt at basing them properly, on irregular squares of card with scatter, but that too could be improved.  I don't want to be harsh on my former self, and it is good practice to keep at least some of your early attempts at painting - so you can see how far you've come - but these deserved better and so the first step was to strip the old bases and dig in to the supply of pennies.  Thence to add fine sand for texture.

Next up, out with the airbrush for a light coat of black primer.  Even on the soft Airfix figures the enamels had held up to over thirty years of abuse, so just a light dusting, and a little more directed at the bases, was necessary.

Dusted and ready for their next stage

On to the actual painting.  My technique for 20mm mini's has not really changed in years, only some of the materials to get the job done has changed.  Neatness is key, but it isn't a case of being perfect.  Planning as in any project really helps.  Broadly I worked from the bottom of the figure to the top and from the lowest layers to the top at roughly the same time.  What's that mean?  Well, boots first the gaiters, then trousers.  Rifles before the hands holding them, helmets and patches last of all.  

You get the idea.  

Its all in flat colours too, slightly lighter than you would think you'd need them to be.  In part this is as we are going to then do a shading glaze; but also the smaller the model, the lighter it should be, to appear as in real life.  The science of this has something to do with reflected light, and a small body can reflect less light so should begin lighter to look as its' real life equivalent would.  But I haven't done the 10,000 to count as an expert in this factoid.

Anyhoo, as said, it all helps with the shading glaze; which is where the magic happens and the models are transformed.  My preferred formula is 50/50 Army Painter Strong Tone & Matt Varnish (of any brand) applied by brush.  The varnish helps dilute and flow-improve the Strong Tone, whilst also sealing and protecting the paint job.  Neat!  Then it was just a case of finishing the bases.

Lovely!

So here we have the benefit of decades of practice!  a Mixture of Airfix soft plastic and ESCI hard plastic marines are turned into a platoon of the 4th Division, US Infantry (Armoured).  No modifications to the original build of the models were made, as they were likely to be pretty frail, and I felt I would honour the state I assembled them to, back in the day.  But with the painting and new basing they really seem transformed.

One thing I noticed was how clearly the ESCI figures were ripped off from the Airfix models, with only one of the saved figures being an original sculpt, the rest are just torso swaps.  That said, several of the poses look better for it!  Despite that the Airfix Marines were some of my favourite figures back in the day.  and doing these up the nostalgia values were high.  

All in all a quick, but highly enjoyable task.  And heartening to make these fellows stand proud once more.

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Monday, August 03, 2020

Sicilian Normans and more on eBay....

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Going through the plastic rubble, I found many models I didn't need myself, that would still be fun to paint and do something with, but not keep.  And so up online for sale now are the following:

Sicilian Normans of the 1st Crusade
Milites
Bohemond and his Entourage
Spearmen unit 1
Spearmen unit 2
Sicilian Muslim Bowmen
Crossbowmen

This lot were mostly 28mm Conquest Games miniatures left over from my Feudals project, but I also bought in a dozen more to make a viable force.  Fun to paint, but it's not an army I had any plans on making so for the time being they are a selling project to fund other whims.

These are online here: Sicilians nb: SOLD

At the same time I found a couple of Russian tanks I painted a couple of years back, and a selection of spare miniatures, enough for a scratch force of WW2 20mm's: 

Assault Group

Infantry 
T34/76 Model 1943
IS2 Model 1944
Zis3 76mm
Group HQ or Recon team
82mm Mortar team

Ideally there should have been a bit more infantry, but this is all I had, and it simply isn't worth me buying more at the moment.  for Berlin 1945, these make a perfectly plausible force.

These are online here: Russians nb: SOLD

Like I say, these were both entertaining projects to try some variant techniques and basing on, but to eBay they must go, and hopefully they'll fund a shiny miniatures boardgame or two.  I'm eyeing up something to replace Imperial Assault and Conan in the painting queues.

Feel free to help me out ;-)

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Tuesday, June 09, 2020

German Supply Truck - Super detail from nothing much!

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You may have seen 4D models floating around the internet, and some of them are pretty terrible.  The tracked vehicles bear only a passing resemblance to tanks.  But the couple of trucks they do are pretty good.  I picked one up for a couple of quid from China to fill a niche in my WW2 Germans at a modest outlay, and to see if the kit was any good:

You're lucky if you get a box, to be fair.

It was actually, ok.  A lot better than buying a resin model arguably.  And when you go to the trouble of excessive detailing you can really make it look pretty damned nice.

 
 
Text:  'Smoking Forbidden'

 

 
So as you might know from prior models in my WW2 German project, a lot of detailing was done here.  Broadly speaking; Airbrush, oil paint filter surface, add hand painted lettering, tires, oil panel line wash, chipping, rust - including full exhaust system, dust, mud splatters, fresh mud, silt stains, fresh water marks.  Yeah, something like that.  Oh and the base was done separately, the interior was painted before fitting and the windows were custom made to replace the clunky fish tank in the kit.

No small amount of work, but it's all good fun and each model seems to improve over the last.

This fulfills a rules-requirement for a dedicated supply truck.  Giving me everything I need for a core game in my rules of choice.

One more piece of progress.

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Wednesday, March 18, 2020

SdKfz 171 Panzer V: Panther - 2nd Panzer Division, June 1944

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Super detailing tank paint jobs is a slow process, even if the enthusiasm is up, you are sitting around waiting for various oils and finishes to take often days to dry.  That is partly my excuse as to why it has taken me three months to finish this one model.  Going next level on the modelling side of the hobby is no key to speed painting.

Still this vehicle is finished, and ready to supply some serious muscle to my otherwise second line German units.

  
  
  
  
This model has really leaned on the wet effects, draining off fresh rain, splattered with wet mud, covered in oil, rust marks, silt marks and general grime.  Clearly the crew spent more time in Normandy cafés than they did cleaning their charge.

The foliage is sections of torn up coloured sponge, hand painted with drybrushed highlights, to get the full look; I sourced tiny twigs from a shrub in the yard and attached these to the model first, this gives the sponges - which are soaked in PVA glue - something to adhere to, as well as making the whole look more like tree branches loaded onto the tank.  Its a much better look than lichen, or simple flock.

You may notice some shiny impact marks on the tank too...

 
I experimented with these based on a technique from 1/35 scale modelling:


They are not great, but for a first attempt they look okay.

The Armourfast Panther kit is, to be perfectly fair, pretty basic, bought a long time before this project went to a super-detailed aesthetic, but the details that are there are crisp and well enough done. 

The tracks are the inevitable weak point, as being single piece castings any attempt at realistic treads is impossible, using a rust base, water stains, weathering powders and some selective metallic's, I've tried to improve them.  I also tried a different effect on the exhaust system, picked up from some other tutorial; which although hidden in the images was simple and looks pretty nice.  One for another model perhaps.

Next up may even be an actual game with them, Covid-19 permitting...

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Monday, January 13, 2020

Painting Oddments

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Trawling through the camera and mobile phone, there are a bunch of records of items I've done in the last few months.  As I'll most certainly not post about them individually, here we'll rush through them all.

First of all, I've come back to the Conan miniatures and started churning out a few more of the characters:

  
 
Including two more Conan variants and the glorious Camel.  That said, I'm also at the stage of having to paint some of the worst sculpts in the set.  Such as the weirdly flat Bone Golem...

Next up; WW2 German Infantry:

 

These are mainly PSC Germans, along with a handful of the old Valiant Miniatures.  Not photographed are another ten man section I finished, making for a total of 40 infantry to go with the command and recon elements I'd done before.  Although the basic technique I've used for these is the shaded glaze method, the level of underlying detail was increased, with better camouflage and so on.

Having enough models to play a game now, my thoughts have turned to terrain, of which I have little presently suitable for a 20mm Normandy set up.  I quickly assembled a few buildings in the Normandy style, though somewhat simplified.  I experimented with the airbrush for some of the painting, and finished the rest in a traditional style.
 
Next up, a barn and ruin, and some Bocage.

Lastly for today, I did a little painting for my Girlfriend for Xmas.  She is a big Alfonse Mucha fan, with many prints of his art around her house.  I was able to get hold of a limited edition 75mm sculpt of one of the figures from his work, and painted it up as best I could for her.


Quite a different challenge, being a model with far more subtle details than your typical wargames miniature.  I was happy with most of the result though; and the good lady loved it!

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