Sunday, November 22, 2015

Mix-n-Match

An eclectic assortment of models has graced my workbench over the last few months. Most are now done and here are a few of the results.

Starting where I left off last time, with Reaper fantasy figures, here's Rogers the Bull:



Making use of a Reaper miniature, I now have a twisted-ghosts-scary-thingy model for my Angmar Lord of the Rings forces. GW's model has been unavailable for some time, cost a lot and didn't look as good as this one:







Then we have an orphaned StuG F/8. This is the third model from an Old Glory package. It wandered away from the other two and sat in undercoat for a couple of years, but now it's happy in grey:




Sticking with vehicles, a Battlefront Somua S.35 has now joined the three Old Glory models. It is a fraction taller and has a little more detail sculpted on, but the two brands blend well together. Paints are assorted old-formula Humbrol enamels, which brush beautifully.








Every German force likes 88s in the background. Back in the old days, Battlefront's boxed set for 88s came with two guns deployed on scenic bases and two complete models  to be assembled in the towing position, to go behind the supplied halftracks. Scrounge suitable crew figures from, say, Old Glory packs and, voila, one has four 88s for the price of two.






The most time has gone to a box of Planetary Empires tiles from GW. This was a set that GW released to complement their 40K game. One can clip them together in various ways, add factories, shield generators and so on and fight campaigns over the landscape. Alien worlds can have alien colours!







Monday, August 10, 2015

Dodging Dragons and Grabbing Loot

Fantasy miniatures painted over the summer.

Most of these are from Reaper's vast range, some in metal and some in Bones soft plastic. The treasure chest may be from an early 1980s box by TSR or another of the figures manufacturers from that bygone era. Edit (15 Aug) Turns out the treasure chest is from Grenadier Models, early 1980s. I thought it looked to solid for a TSR miniature.

Reaper's Bones range is great for large figures and for adding groups of monsters to your horde at a decent price, but the soft plastic does lose some of the finer detail on individual heroic types.

Paints used come from Humbrol (enamel and acrylic), Tamiya, Vallejo and GW.

The Axe Knight



 Metal figure, enamel paint for the armour, hence the strong shine. This mustachioed hero will undoubtedly be found in the thick of the fray shouting such helpful rallying cries as "Come on me, what ho!". I do wonder why a knight whose heraldic device is crossed swords is playing with an axe, though.

Paladin of Clementine


This one's a plastic figure, hence the softer facial detail. She was painted to be the first paladin from the church of Clementine in a D&D game. Colours were specified as black and yellow with a rose device (shield) and entwined thorn vines (tabbard). Alas, the poor lady died in battle before her figure was ready.

Dragoborn Warrior




Another plastic. The beautiful gloss shine on the armour was created with a thin coat of Liquitex general purpose high gloss artist's varnish. I found these acrylic varnishes in the local arts and crafts store and have fallen in lurv with them.

Dwarf Hunter and Dogs




Metal figures, all. Eddy only has two dogs in the D&D game, but he's adopted a third just for these portraits.

Half Dragon/Dragonborn





Another metal figure. No particular character in mind, but this would be a dragonborn who is approaching herodom, given that he towers over normal figures.

Barbarian Warrior


Metal. The lines caused by mismatched mold parts are not so obvious to the eye, especially at a couple of feet distance with 48-year-old Mark 1s. Reaper call her "barbarian warrior" or some such. I prefer to think of her as "Not-Red-Sonja".

Peacock Warrior


 This one is plastic, so the detail is soft around the head. An Elf with expensive armour and a big peacock on his shield. He may look a bit of a ponce, but he's probably quite good with that sword, what with being several hundred years old.


Scalpel


A henchman of dubious background. Small, not very bright, loyal, stealthy and expert at putting his dagger into unsuspecting kidneys. Sadly, after an unfortunate but briefly exciting encounter with an ancient blue dragon, he has devoted the rest of his life to holy contemplation. Another of the Bones figures.

And lastly, what would a good fantasy RPG session be without loot?



I had to add a washer to stop the chest tipping over. That might be a rug under the chest, or it might be arcane wardings.

Summer Fun

So, what with all the usual summertime fun, painting has been a bit, well, random. I've taken to grabbing odds and ends and partially-done pieces and finishing them, just for fun. On top of that, I've rediscovered the joys of painting fantasy figures in completely-made-up-no-historical-uniforms colours.

So, here we go...

First up, we have a 1/100th scale Matilda II from Zvezda. These little plastic Zvezda kits pop together in a few minutes and don't really need glue, although I use said stuff because the solvent smells good and the join lines don't start to gap apart over time.




The Tilda with the commander is a Battlefront offering. Both models were painted with Xtracolour's trio of Caunter scheme paints, albeit with a gap of several years. As you can see, the BF model has more detail sculpted on and comes with the option of having a commander sticking his head and shoulders out of an open hatch. The Zvezda model is otherwise a decent mix-n-match prospect.

And then we have three French Somua S.35 tanks from Old Glory. These were supposed to have been Char B1bis tanks but the package was mislabelled and I think the Somuas are neat tanks, so I kept them. Pretty much all the paint on these comes from my collection of (mostly ancient) Humbrol enamels. They're painted following a drawing gleaned from teh interwebz for the 18th dragoons of the 1st DLM.



French tanks look pretty in these schemes. I may end up branching out into a May 1940 French tank list for Flames. One day.

Changing scales and manufacturers, next up is a small band of uruk-hai from GW's Lord of the Rings range. These came in a bag full of assorted orcs purchased from someone who was selling off excess minis (horrible thought, eh?). Paints are Humbrol, Tamiya and Xtracolour's "Dark Flesh". The models looked very dark and drab when painted, which is entirely appropriate for them, as they're part of the sable-clad army that issued from the Morgul Vale, but did make them too dull, so I decided to give them a "minwax treatment". The pikeorcs got a dip in a water-based stain and the crossboworcs in a dark walnut solvent-based stain. Group A ended up lighter and redder, group B turned very dark, but have more depth. I'm still not sure which I prefer.




Coming up next - dodge the dragon and grab the loot!

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Clearing Some Odds and Ends

An assortment of 15mm vehicles have been lurking in the corners of my work area, sporting varying degrees of undercoat, so I decided to finish a few.

First batch is a field car and a pair of halftracked tractors for use by an 88mm flak battery.





For many years I have used Tamiya paints through an airbrush for German vehicles in the later war colours. This time I decided to brush paint and to only use the base dark yellow colour. I pulled out some old Humbrol paints and went to work. The Humbrol version of "dunkelgelb" is a bit paler, more washed-out than the Tamiya version, so these three vehicles received a second coat, this time of Tamiya paint, as they have to match other vehicles and the 88s themselves.

The next mini-project was a pair of Hornisse. The first two Hornisse I painted had olive green camouflage applied over the base yellow; these two have been left unadorned. Again, I used the Humbrol version of dark yellow, not being concerned about a little variety in shade. Interestingly, the Humbrol paint has darkened after being coated with one layer each of gloss varnish (helps decals and washes settle properly) and matt varnish (these things did not receive regular wax and shine attention).



Brush painting without multiple colours of camouflage was quite enjoyable.