Friday, 25 October 2024

 I realised that I haven't posted anything on here for nearly 5 years! That means a lot has happened in my life that has impacted on my hobby, both for the better and the worse.

I have moved to Kent, got divorced and am about to get married again, so that can give you some insight into why I might not have been as diligent in blogging as I could have been. The hobby stuff spent a lot of time in storage, and there was a period were I was doing a lot of buying but not much painting or playing.

Over the period I've been off air I've come to realise that I'm never going to achieve some things so holding onto those projects 'just in case' was pointless, and a lot has gone on eBay. I can seen that I was already getting frustrated by the shows back in 2019, and this has continued. I have been back to Salute and others since, but the old excitement has gone, and I now find myself not that bothered if I don't get to a show from one year to the next. Similarly my taste in gaming has changed. Whilst I still love Ken Reilly's podcast and aspirations of BIG games, I am becoming more attracted to the smaller scales. I think this is due to the ease I am having painting the epic Napoleonics from Warlord, and I am slowly moving across to 15mm or less for everything except Imaginations and ACW. where I'll stay true to 20mm plastics and 30mm Spencer Smiths respectively.

My new gaming set up will be a 12x6 set of tables in a shed, so will have storage underneath and around. By going to 10-15mm for most things it will allow me to use the same terrain. 

At least that's the plan....

Monday, 1 July 2019

Contrast paints

So I was interested in seeing what the new contrast paints are like. I have so far used them on 15mm FPW minifigs with good effect. They also look good for using instead of agrax earthshade on colours you want the wash effect but not to make too muddy.
The next test will be some 28mm Romans and some 10mm Austrians SYW.

Wednesday, 24 April 2019

Reflections on Salute

Enough time has passed now I think for me to able to post my honest opinion of Salute.
I drove up from Wales with Huw (12) having told him it was the biggest wargaming show you'd find in the UK. He was looking forward to trying out some demos of new games and perhaps some participation ones.
We didn't get there till 1200, and the crowds had thinned a bit, but they were 3 deep in places. We did our usual wander all around and then go back to look at stuff. Well, that was the plan anyway.
It quickly became clear that the majority of demos were of niche warband things in their own universe. We had no interest in these so seeing 5 versions of the Fallout game didn't help.
We did get a demo of the new cold war rules from Great Escape Games. That seemed logical and fitted well the 15mm figures being used. Although it looked like Team Yankee, it played very differently. So might be worth further play.
Interestingly the Battfront stall was just over and had no European Moderns by the time we got there, but lots of Middle Eastern figures for their new expansion.
We also took part in a few turns of the Peterborough Wargames group Bloody Omaha. This was using IABSM.
It looked lovely and if you knew the rules would probably zip along at a club night. They didn't really suit a show where people want to drop in and out, but still get an idea of the game.
Huw played for 30 minutes and activated once. He is a fan of Lardies' games but this really didn't float his boat.
We tried to get a go at the Malaya CoC run by the Lardies themslves, only for a fully grown man to barge Huw out of the way. CoC player in all sense of the word.

I did do some shopping but nothing that I couldn't have done online and actually I didn't spend more than 40% of my budget.
Will I go again, probably not. Huw almost certainly won't.
I think the next show will be Warfare in November, and see how that goes. It could be I'm showed out, and that doesn't bode well for my 50th trip to Historicon.

Tuesday, 9 April 2019

Featherstone weekend

A little late but time to post my thoughts on this years Featherstone Weekend. It was a Sudan game using figures, terrain and rules all supplied by Mr Steve Thompson. Apart from the fact that everything had been built and painted since this time last year, the majority of the sculpts were custom castings!

The scenario was a British column marching out to relieve a town and pick up the Colonel's wife from a vilage on the way. As well as British infantry and Cavalry, the column contained Egyptian and Indian troops, and a full baggage train. Not only did the column need to reach the city, but also defend the camp and the baggage train.

To help there were 3 gunboats on the Nile with a mix of Canon and Machine guns.
I commanded the Bengal Lancers, and maintained my form of being useless! I was awarded 3 white feathers for my troops behaviour, which meant me ending up as the lowest scoring command with -58! David Hill ( a damn colonial no less) managed 90! He was awarded a VC and Bar.

Despite my troops running away on Sunday Morning, I had great fun and am looling forward to the Zulu war next year.

Wednesday, 27 February 2019

It's no good for your elf

The elf army now stands at 30 units! It is amazing how cheaply you can pick up units on ebay, especially since there aren't Elves as such in AOS. Just a few more units to do and then it will be done.
To me most of the Old warhammer high elves look Norman more than anything else so I have a mainly foot army with a few elite units of horse to represent the nobles.
As it is an undivided Elf army, I amd happy to have Dark Elf and Wood Elf units as well. To me they represent differing Thanedoms, in the same way a Wessex army would have been a bit different to a Mercian or Welsh army.
Next onto the painting table are their opponents, lots of goblins.
For rules I am thinking of using Hail Caeser! But might try the new Warlords of Erewhon as I've just picked up the rules.

Wednesday, 16 January 2019

National Elf service

I mentioned that I had bought several units of elves, well that became several more. At the last count I have painted over 120 castings, mainly in 24 or 20 man units.
I bought resin movement trays at Warfare, and love them. I think I might need to get some more, either at Crusade or on-line.

This year I intended to be lead/plastic neutral, but have failed already. I will try to start no new periods untill I can see a dent in the mountain.

Tuesday, 27 November 2018

Magpies strike again

I went to Hay on Wye the other day. For those who don't know this is a town on the Welsh Borders which is famous for it's second hand and classical bookshops. While I was there I had an impulse buy of a book called Battles of Tolkein. This was a collection of all the big battles from all of his works. It is nicely illustrated and full of ideas for scenarios.
Before I realised I had bought several units of classic GW elves. Now I already have a few units, but this will pad out my forces. I may be able to do some of the big elves vs Orcs battles using the 3rd edition WHFB rules.
This has mucked up my painting plans so I might not get as much done before the Fat man comes as I had hoped.

Tuesday, 2 October 2018

Colours

Huw and I went to Colours in September. It was a long old drive from Wales to Newbury but I bumped into a few old contacts such as Steve Thompson and Dave Brown.
Huw and I had great game of "Kill the Tiger", playing 2 of 4 T-34s chasing down a Tiger. It only took 10 minutes but was great fun.
Didn't spend much. I got  some Selucid Phalangites to go with the plastic one from Warlord games sale, and some 20mm Blitzkrieg germans for Huw's evolving CoC army.
The only other thing I got was one of the giants in miniature from WI, the Balin of Ibalin figure. It's based on Mr Bloom in a non IP infringing way, but he will be a hero for my Norman army.

Friday, 27 July 2018

Real life gets in the way again.

The attempt to reduce theead mountain has resumed. I have finished all my 28mm plastic Normans, which I have painted in a yellow and red colour scheme. This represents the County of Glamorgan and so this can be the Norman troops of the Fitzwilliam family.
I've also painter most of the 20mm Imaginations figures and want to get them all out on the table before I do anymore. I have around 200 American militia to paint. All the regular troops have been 12 on a 100x40 base, but I might base these 6 -8 on the same sized base to represent the looser formation one would expect from militia. The big choice is whether to make them a militia for one of my two existing armies or to create a third   nation. I am tending towards the latter, and using some Napoleonic troops say Spanish or Dutch Belgian to represent the few Regular battalions, whilst the bulk of the army is made up of militia, similar to most USA armies before WW1.

I bought some Bretonnians on ebay, a really good deal for 100 archers for less than £30. They will go with some foot knights and perry plastics to make up a couple of WOTR retinues for Dragon Rampant.

Monday, 11 June 2018

Black Powder 6 Weeks war

This weekend I managed to convince my son to try a game of Black Powder. We used my 6mm APW figures. These are based on 60x45 bases with a mixture of formed infantry with a skirmisher screen. We counted each base as a "standard" unit with each Prussian brigade having 4 bases of line with a jaeger and artillery base attached. The cavalry was in a seperate brigade.
On the Austrian side, each brigade was of 4 bases with attached artillery. There was also a seperate artillery reserve as well as a large cavalry brigade. The scenario was of the prussians advancing to try and command a road junction with the Austrians rushing to prevent it.
I wasn't sure that BP would deal with the age of rifles, but it worked really well. The nature of the rules allows for tinkering so I made the prussian rifles have an extra dice when firing at less than half range to represent the breech loading rifles. The Austrians got an extra dice for every 4 cannon they fire at the same target to represent their preference for massed artillery.
The game flew along and we were able to play 8 brigades a side to a conclusion in 3 hours. The Austrians managed to break 3 prussian brigades through a combination of massed cannon and a well timed cavalry charge.
A really good game.

Thursday, 24 May 2018

General update

It seems that it happens every year. I go off to the Featherstone weekend and come back full of enthusiasm for the period we've just played. Couple that with a small amount of cash for my birthday the next week and you get magpie central.

Long time readers (if any) may remember that I had all my stuff in storage but now it has been moved into my new shed/man cave. This has allowed me to really look at what I have and what I need to get useful armies for each scale/era.

It has also allowed me to group projects together so that as the unpainted figures change into actual units the impact on the lead/plastic mountain is more pronounced.

I have mainly been working on 3 projects. Firstly my 28mm ACW. I have decided that since I commanded Rhodes' division at Chancellorsville at the Featherstone weekend, it would make sense to replicate this in my Confederate forces, whilst their Union opposition would be generic. A quick google search showed 30 regiments plus a battery of artillery. Keeping with 20 man units that means 150 bases of 40mmx40mm. I have already done 12 units from boxes I had to hand but there are Zouave units since one of the boxes was the Perry ACW battle box. I might just have to paint some more units and keep the zoaves as a reserve elite regiment.

By sticking with 40x40 bases I can use either Black Powder or Pickett's charge, or even Guns At Gettysburg.

At the same time I am increasing my 10mm Acw units. I have completed the 4 blisters I had for Xmas so have added another 24 stands to each side for F&F, although they could be used for BBB, or on a sabot for Altar of Freedom which I have just got and like the look of. Of course I do have some 2mm Acw which would do for the latter....

The last project is my imaginations SYW. The not-French side has seen the addition of several regiments including the Grenadiers du Roi and Musketeers du Roi, as well as the Grenadiers du Concorde. These are all 20mm soft plastic SYW or AWI figures which I buy from eBay whenever there's a job lot for sale. Each regiment is 8 bases of 12 figure on a 100x40 base which gives a really impressive 800mm frontage for a regiment.

I have 120 28mm Union troops on the painting table and aftet that I might need to change eras for a bit but if I just do one more zoave unit and another CSA I will have painted all my existing 28mm acw figures and then can plan my next purchases.......

Monday, 26 March 2018

The Featherstone Weekend

My annual trip to Basingstoke has come and gone. This year the battle was Chancellorsville from the ACW. I was Jackson so had command of most of the Ocnfederate 2nd Corps. The scenario was sneaky, a holding force attracts the bluebellies attention then a flanking force bursts from the wood. Or rather didn't. There were simply too many troops to deploy sensibly.
Most of 2nd Corps started off in woods, so was limited to small moves unless in column of march. This meant quicker movement but made the troops very fragile if fired upon. There was also a large log jam at the edge of the woods as the columns chaged to line formation. This doubled their frontage, so made advancing difficult. Regiments had to wait for the ones in front to be shattered before taking their place.
The Union managed to place a unit in a building that held up the whole right flank for nearly the duration of the battle. So this and the delay in the woods gave the union commanders lots of time to reorganise to the flank threat, meaning that the Confederate troops had an almost WW1 experience advancing into entrenched (behind stone walls and picket fences) troops with lots of Artillery.
A union battery of 5 guns managed to get into a flanking position. The enfilading fire on lines of troops was devistating, and many units were broken without firing a shot themselves.
The rules we used were Black Powder with the ACW supplement. I think we saw the best and the worst of the rules during the weekend. If you are lucky then your troops can make a sweeping advance of up to 36", but then can't fire. So the furthest you can move and still shoot is 12", which makes moving over 6' of table a long process. The ability to recover wounds means that units hang around for ever unless you direct the fire of a whole front on them, and then they vaporise with little chance of mitigation. Artillery fire is devastating or ineffective, and has no real effect on morale.
The worst rule in my opinion is the behaviour of "broken" or "whipped" units. One of my brigades had been badly shot up and so became broken. They retired over 12" to the edge of the woods where they reformed line. This line was of 3 regimenta and 2 cannon facing down the road out of the wood, so a fairly strong defensive position, which even a weak unit could have held, even by being a potential threat.
Under Black Powder, broken units must maintain 12" seperation from all enemy units. So my opponant used this rule to force my units back, just by moving closer to them. This exposed the flank of my Corps to his massed cannon and carnage ensued.
I understand the need to denote demoralised and defeated troops, as well as the concept of moving the game along to a conclusion. I think it would have been better to devise some house rule that allowed the broken units to trickle back to the front, as this is what happened historically. Perhaps coming back at half strength after so many turns out of firing range and without additional casualties.
The weekend was fun, but that was due to the company and the beautiful figures I had access to. The game itself won't be logged as one of my better ones. By lunch time on the Sunday my only purpose was to roll dice to see how many casualties I took, with no way of countering them. It was probably a result of my generalship and lack of intimate knowledge of the rules, but when huge numbers of my troops broke, with no real warning, then the only one having fun was the opposing general who looked to maximise my discomfort at every step.

Still, it was great to catch up with the gang. Even though we tend to see each other only once a year, the friendship is still there. Traditions such as the sheep and penguin jokes continue, and this years best dressed was Henry Hyde with his art deco bovver boots. Steve Dix was the most sporting General, and was awarded a model of Longstreet.

Next year is Colonials with Fancy Dress and Pith Helmets. Can't wait!

Monday, 11 December 2017

Year end stats

It is unlikely that I'll get to do much more painting before the fat man comes so here are the stats for the year:

2mm 2 armies for the Acw
6mm 25 bases for my 6ww project.
10mm 304 figures for my acw and crimean armies
15mm 844 figures and 18 AFV including 2 whole armies for the french wars of religion.
20mm 359 figures and 6 AFV
28mm 173 figures and 2 AFV
40k 73 figures.

So overall not a bad year. Still not lead neutral but starting to make dents in the mountain.
My plan for the new year is to only buy stuff if it allows me to complete a project. So command units for the multiple plastic sets are ok but NO NEW PERIODS.
I'm having a wobble about scale, again. The new shed is built but is  unlikely to allow me to have anything bigger than a 6x4   table. This means big skirmishes or packed tables only. My recent experiments with 10mm and 15mm have made me think that this might be the way to go.
What worries me is moving all the sruff back into the shed from storage and realising there isn't room for it all.

Wednesday, 15 November 2017

An interesting discovery.

I was clearing out the hard drive of my laptop as an excuse not to do any work on my dissertation, and found this article which I had written hoping that Henry Hyde might publish it if he needed to fill space in MWWBG. Sadly not long after Henry emailed back saying to keep taking the pills, and then before I could edit it, Henry was no longer associated with the magazine.
So in a extraordinary piece of vanity here it is in it's glory. After all, if you can't be vain on a blog, what's the point?


Wargaming my Way - Losing Frequently!
In the Beginning

Each one of us reading this magazine will have his or her own back story as to how and why they war-game. I grew up in the eighties, and followed the usual path of reading the Lord of the Rings to discovering that you could “play” an Elf in a game called Dungeons and Dragons. This led me to discover my innate megalomania, I needed a sword +4, +10 vs Dragons, and my friend Brian the DM was foolish enough to allow me to get one. This led to the first example of what I have now decided must be a law of nature, Melvyn’s first law if you will. No matter what I do, and no matter how easy it should be to achieve a positive outcome, if it involves dice Melvyn will fail. 100% guaranteed. Hence the death of my character, Fleetwood Plantagenet (see I told you I was a megalomaniac) in single combat to a Red Dragon. This was followed by the death of my Judge to the Dark Judges, and my smuggler to the dreaded space lice of Blaart. My love affair with role playing was waining, but I still longed to do something with Elves, Goblins etc. As I went to Senior School, the D&D group split up and I discovered rugby. This was a sport that I have continued to enjoy although these days it’s as a coach. Rather surprisingly it was a hot bed of nerds, and I was introduced to the idea of wargaming by one of the team who had an older brother with a couple of ancients armies. At the time we thought they were brilliant, even though they were plastic and the paints were Humbral enamels with a gloss varnish. The rules must have been some version of WRG ancients but might just have been the Dead Sea Scrolls for all they meant to us.  Sadly the friend moved away and rugby took over. 
By the time I was 14 or so, I still had an interest but hadn’t played with figures for a while. As part of the school socialisation programme (I went to an all boys school and they were worried for the future of the human race), all the children in the Town spent one week in a central “business experience”. Essentially the “team” would be given a brief by a real company to develop, and the team would split up to pursue different aspects of product design. The week I went the company wanted us to work on a board game with miniatures they were calling “Quest and Heroes”. By the end of the week I’d convinced them to call it Heroquest and had suggested the design of the games master screen. It was only later that I realised how much my youthful enthusiasm had saved them on a professional designer, but still had a thrill when my parents bought me the game for Christmas that year.
I dabbled briefly with Warhammer but couldn’t afford the figures on my pocket money so decided to get a Saturday job to supplement my burgeoning Elf habit. This had two effects. Firstly I bought several boxes of the Citadel regiment sets (Elves, dwarves and goblins in the same box if anyone remembers them), and secondly it caused me to stop playing with toy soldiers as I discovered that the young ladies with whom I worked in the shoe shop didn’t really think it was cool. However, I still kept hand in by painting my brother’s squats for Rogue Trader, which he then sold to buy a guitar. As with most gamers of my generation, I stopped whilst at university and only really came back to wargaming when my wife suggested `I needed a hobby’. Whether she was concerned for my mental health or just wanted me out of the way, I’ll never know. So my second wargaming period started with a visit to Crusade 1998, a visit which has become an annual trip, now with both my sons. 

The second era
I think if it hadn’t been for the boys, I might have remained a collector rather than a gamer. In my mind I needed a complete army before I could even think of gaming, and given that I have what Neil Schuck calls a “magpie nature”, I ended up with several part complete armies for several periods but no opposing armies. Tom (now 14), said he wanted to play with dad’s toys, so I had to finish at least one army. The first game we ever had was a Seven Years duff up between British and Prussians (I know, I know) using the dice from a board game and rules based on my garbled memories of 40K. Even though we’ve moved on to other periods including 40k (Sorry Mr Clarke), those homegrown rules have stuck. I think one of my proudest moments was when Tom explained the rules to his younger brother. We were in a local gaming store, and a “proper gamer” overheard. 
‘Oh, that’s 40K but you’ve got it wrong’ says helpful gamer. Tom looked him in the eye and replied ‘These are my Dad’s rules and they’re better than 40k’. Helpful gamer retreats with a smile, and leaves Melvyn to be beaten again. I will state for the record that I have never ever thrown a game so the boys can win, I don’t need to. When Tom hits 21 I’m taking him to Vagus so I  can retire on the profits. 
Having two sons is also an excuse to try new periods and scales. When my ever observant wife hands me the latest package, I can reply that these are the new Warperrylord figures that I though the boys might like. Over the years we have gamed WW1 with Warhammer Historical rules, AWI with Spencer Smiths, WW2 with 15mm figures and Rapid Fire rules. There can’t be a bit of the Market Garden Campaign we haven’t done using British Paras and Heer, and there’s always a Tiger tank. Plus lots and lots of 40k,(Sorry again Mr Clarke). I think we’re probably using 2nd/3rd edition rules and very few of the ‘fluff’ rules but still have a lot of fun. I think that it’s this sense of making it up as we go along and by negotiating that is why I’ve never joined a club or done a tournament. I was always worried that I’d hear that I was ‘doing it wrong’, and that I’d not enjoy it anymore.

Painting and the Lead/plastic Mountain
I realised a while ago that whilst I like painting I’m never going to be much good at it, and the only way I’d do three colours was if one of them was a dip. However, all of the figures in the pictures accompanying this article are painted by me, and I’m happy with how they look. I will now utter heresy. I don’t care if they have the wrong buttons or facings, they are my toys to play with and I’ll paint them how I want, thank you very much. I might even confess to having played with unpainted figures from time to time! I know, I’ll get my coat, now in a minute.  The point is, that I just want to get big armies on the table, so readily accepted Mr Berry’s mantra of painting the unit, not the figure, and applied it to all my figures. 
I have painted and sold, and painted and sold several armies now. On occasion it has been the same army that I regretted selling so got again only for it to remain in the pile for several years then be converted to paypal balance for the latest trend. My current kick is for all things 19th Century. This has manifested itself as Spencer Smiths and Perry/Warlord plastics for the 100 days Campaign, based for “In the Grand Manner”, together with Perry plastics for the ACW Eastern theatre and Spencer Smiths for the Western, and  finally 6mm Baccus for the 6 weeks War. Not forgetting the 40mm forces for “Sharp Practice” in the Peninsular, some of whom used to belong to a certain podcaster from Birmingham.  Yet at the same time I have managed to achieve something I never thought I would. I have A FINISHED ARMY! Admittedly it’s in 15mm and could use some more heavy infantry but I have managed to paint all the packs I bought. The same cannot be said for the Persians I got to oppose them. 
Each year I keep a tally of what I’ve bought, what I’ve painted and what I’ve sold. It is a vain attempt to keep me lead neutral, and fails every year. However it acts as a chronicle of projects past, whilst keeping encouraged that my output is such that one day I might actually have reduced the mountain to zero. Of course at that point I’ll die but it will have been worth it. Although my wife shakes her head every time I enthuse about a new period and/or scale, she is still glad I didn’t take up golf.  

The Third Age

It was a fortunate coincidence that at around the time I decided that I was happy in how my hobby was going, I discovered the “old school wargaming movement” championed by a certain magazine with a bright red cover. This led to my youngest son getting a regiment of Spencer Smith’s for Christmas painted by Santa (or perhaps a fat bloke without a beard) as the Royal WELCH regiment of course.  At the same time I stumbled upon the existence of the podcast and as a result of this I entered in email conversations with Henry and Neil, and was extremely lucky to be a part of the first Featherstone Memorial Weekend. It is not an overstatement that this led to the third part of my wargaming life, the part where I game with alleged grown-ups (Mr Freeth, I’m looking at you). Although a serious wargame, that Featherstone weekend was full of laughter, awful dice rolls and the making of several new and lasting friendships. All weekend I charged Heth’s division at the Federals, up and down a hill, never achieving a breakthrough but it didn’t matter. I was having fun with a capital F. The second year was Arnhem, and I was Colonel Frost on the bridge, as well as the Polish para’s on the other side. I was shot to pieces but managed to immobilise a Tiger with a grenade in a greasy sock, so left a very happy man. This year I achieved the impossible, I overturned Melvyn’s first law and won. Not the battle, don’t be daft, but the most sporting General. I have never been so proud as when Henry handed me the trophy (ok, the kids’ births may have come close if the wife asks). So what is wargaming my way? Easy- lose, lose,and lose again but always have fun, otherwise what’s the point?

Moving stuff

I am about to move my wargaming stuff back out of storage and into the new mancave/shed.
Not being able to access most of my collection has made me really think about what I want to do with my hobby.
Even with the new mancave the largest table I'll have regular access to is 6x4. This means that Waterloo in 28mm in a no go. For that kind of megalomania I'll have to wait for my trips to the Wargames Holiday Centre (hello Mr Freeth).
I'm moving more and more towards less than15mm for everything except skirmishes.
This could mean a second big ebay sell off. I think as I restock the shed, a stock take is in order. So watch this space, interesting times are approaching

Wednesday, 18 October 2017

Latest work

The 15mm WW2 American units have made it across the painting table. They are all winter units in greatcoats so essentially have been drybrushed, washed and highlighted. The thing that took the longest was the bases. They needed 2-3 drybrushes with progressively lighter grey to give me the right melting snow look I needed. As the entire point was to develop units for the Bulge, they have been worth the effort. I have lots of Shermans in my XXX Corps army, and I have deliberately left off decals that would prevent me switching them from UK to US ownership. I'm sure someone will point out that they're the wrong colour green for one or the other, but I don't care. Since they are all basecoated in Vallejo Nato green and then washed in green or brown ink, they are meant to look generic. After all, a sherman is a sherman is a sherman.

Most of my hobby stuff is in storage after the shed collapsed, so I am limited to what I can do. For example, I've just done a load of 10mm ACW but have realised that the 1'x3/4 bases I was using for F&F are in the storage unit and right at the back. So I've moved on to some Imaginations stuff. I have 300 20mm SYW Austrians, and at the moment I'm experimenting with colour schemes. One of the nations represents Prussia, but I don't want to follow Austrian colour schemes as the whole point of imaginations is to be as wacky as you want. I'm toying with the idea of Bavarian Blue coats with pink facings and white breeches for the first regiment. They will be the La Reine's Regiment de Fru Fru, commanded by his lordship Le Baron du M'Oncle, who once left his pen somewhere he can't remember.

Eventually these two nations will be joined by one based on AWI British and US Militiamen. I'm doing all this in 20mm plastics, and buying units when I see a likely job lot on ebay. Although set in the Horse and Musket period, I might bring in some Napoleonics, especially for cavalry and artillery since there are few sets of these for the SYW/AWI period, meaning I may have to pay full price for them. Alternatively I could pad them out with a few 20mm metals.

Saturday, 30 September 2017

More work

I have now managed to add 56 Austrian 28mm Landwehr to the done pile. Some 10mm Crimean British guards are next up. As they are wearing greatcoats, I've done a heavy grey drybrush over the black undercoat to everything except skin, and then will go back and pick out the webbing etc. Once done it will give me a reasonable force for Black Powder so I'll need some Russians. Maybe I can get them if I go to Warfare next month.

Thursday, 21 September 2017

I have been busy

In my last post, I said I hoped I could get some hobbying done. That was an understatement! So far whilst off work I have managed to do the following:
40k 8th edition Pox walkers and Death guard army
30 Blood reivers for AoS/40k.
4x30 man 10mm Crimean British Inf Reg
4x12 10mm Crimean British Light Cav
A whole 15mm French wars of religion Catholic army from Essex.

Not bad going. The real rate limiting step is I now have run out of really usfull boxes and need to get some more, but am dependent on my wife finding time and inclination to take me.
I have also managed to redraft 3 chapters of a dissertation.
I will still be off work for around another 3 weeks, so hope to get more done, ready for the new man cave to be finished.

Wednesday, 30 August 2017

Ongoing Work

I have ruptured my achilles tendon so have 5-6 weeks on crutches. This is making getting any hobbying done very difficult. I have painted the Primaris marines from the new 8th edition 40k box as blood angels, and am reasonably happy with the results. I started with a dark red then a red wash followed by 2 layers of highlights. The trickiest part was applying the transfers for the chapter markings as they didn't want to slide off the backing paper easily.
The Nurgle marines are just waiting for their bases to be done, and then I'll start on the pox walkers.
At the same time I've managed to do 2 frost giants from Bones. This look like oversized viking dwarves so will be an addition to my Dwarf army. At the moment this has a regiment of pike and shot dwarves that are true 25mm but look like gnomes next to GW or Mantic dwarves. I think I will treat them as gnomes, but they are still a great unit. My ongoing plan is to develop armies for 3rd Edition Warhammer from a variety of sources. For example, I have some of the new Chaos Warriers from the Age of Sigmar and will use them both as Khorne cultists for 40k as well as Chaos marauders for Fantasy.
With my leg injury it is unlikely that I'll get to either Colours or Warfare. Hopefully this means I can work on the lead mountain.

Monday, 26 June 2017

Sorry for the delay

I've neglected this blog for a while due to real world issues. I have a dissertation to write and that means my evenings are spoken for. Having said that I have managed to keep going on the lead mountain. I know I said that the next project would be 10mm Crimean, but I've been playing a lot of Rapid Fire with ny youngest son, and have realised there were missing units for my british and Germans. This prompted me to get a box of the 15mm bren carriers from PSC, as well as some Lorraine Schleppers. To this was added an Achilles tank destroyer and the 25 lbers from PSC.
Since we've been playing so much I got the battle of the bulge scenario book so had to get some Americans. I scored a good deal on ebay, and acquired a squad of Priest tanks with an op Sherman, as well as an Armoured rifle company and an infantry company in greatcoats. To this I added a box of heavy weapons from PSC. When complete I think I can field most of the troops needed for the bulge scenarios if I don't mind using British Shermans.