Showing posts with label wargames. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wargames. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Miniature Progress!!!

Hi all! First of all, May the 4th be with you!

Second, after a long wait, I've finally got some lovely miniatures assembled and converted and basecoated to show all y'all!

"Hi, I'm one of Citizen Lafayette's minis,
and I'm one badass mother f****er.

I'm working on a box of plastic "French Napoleonic Infantry 1804-1807" by Victrix. This is a marvelous set of minis that I'm planning to paint up as soldiers of the French Revolution - not a huge stretch! This is my first set of historical miniatures, so I'm excited! 

In this post, I'm going to give a quick walkthrough of my work so far, give my thoughts on the minis and the process, and finally lavish you with the pretty pictures!

Unboxing

The box features lovely artwork depicting Napoleon's finest at their most French, complete with grotesquely droopy mustaches.



Inside the box are 8 eight "sprues," the plastic frames upon which the miniatures are suspended. There are two types of sprue - one with parts for normal line infantry, and the other for the "elites" and "command" minis - the grenadiers, together with the officers, drummers, and flag bearers. They are multi-part minis, with heads, arms, backpacks, and accessories molded separately from the torsos.

The minis are 28mm tall and made of relatively-hard plastic - I found it to be softer than most other plastic 28's, but harder than the soft-plastic 20mm minis that have been available for decades. (This is somewhat annoying, since it means that muskets bend and break relatively easily.)



Assembly

I'm not going to lie, assembling these minis was a royal pain in the butt. First, there was flash everywhere (the thin line of plastic left where the two halves of the mold come together). And since each little man is made of five different pieces, that meant that all five had separate flash lines.

Second, these figures are "modular" - that is, every torso is supposed to roughly fit with every set of arms. However, I found that the compromises involved in creating this modularity meant no torso actually fit any of the arms! I spent days and days trying to figure out how to combine arms and torsos to get natural-looking poses.

Apparently, thumb-poking the dude next to you was a 
sign of affection during the French Revolution.

But, they ultimately got done, and after doing a few conversions, I applied a liberal coat of white basecoat spraypaint (another first time for me... piccies below!)

Conversions

But before we get to the basecoated finished product, I want to talk about the #1 coolest thing about plastic miniatures - the conversions! Converting a mini involves modifying its sculpt, and I wanted to really establish these figures as sons of the Revolution, not Napoleon's lackeys.

So, what was the biggest difference between Revolutionaries and Bonapartists? The revolutionaries had giant ass f****ing plumes! I'm serious, those wacky French put all sorts of crazy things on their hats - (spoons are modeled on to these figures) but what every private really wanted was to have the biggest, fluffiest, most flamboyant plume in the regiment. Observe:

Even though it prevents him from seeing anything in his left field of vision, 
Jacques thought his plume was pretty BAMF...

 ...until he saw this! Mon Dieu! What a masterpiece!

So, how to sexy-up those bicornes? I found these sci-fi heads on ebay, complete with topknots that did admirable work as plumes:


"I don't want my luscious locks
on no Frenchie!" (Too bad)

I was actually able to get a number of different shapes by clipping the heck out of these poor helmets. Here's a small selection of how a few of them turned out:



Pictures to Date!

If you've read this far, you deserve the payoff - Pictures!!!!

The whole unit, prior to conversion and spraypainting!

The command figures - this officer means business with that pistol!
Standard bearer and drummer look typically French.

I tried making each flank into a mini-diorama. 
Here, I converted one soldier to be taking a hit,
while his comrade on the right flinches and the men on either side
put their heads down and keep marching on.


 On the other flank we've got soldiers dealing with fatigue.
Guy in the center is putting a brave face on things,
but his buddies don't seem as happy.

Finally, here's a pic demonstrating the dangers of spraypaint;
The backpacks are identical, but the one on the right is caked
with paint, which obscures some of the details and will make
painting more of a challenge. Lesson learned: don't stand too close!


Well, I hope you've enjoyed, and hopefully there'll be some splashes of color coming soon! Au revoir!

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

What IS Miniature Wargaming?

Hi y'all!

So, I'm planning to make this the first in a series of posts about my foray into a wonderful hobby: assembling and painting miniatures! Over the next few weeks/months, I'll report the progress
on my current project: assembling a box of plastic French Napoleonic Infantry by Victrix. This first post will serve as a brief introduction into the wider world of historical wargaming, of which painting miniatures is just one small part!

BTW, click on the pictures for the full glory!

So, what's all this about miniatures?

Miniature
soldiers! Soldiers for the painting and wargaming hobby are produced in a variety of sizes, materials and styles, and are designed to represent nearly every conflict imaginable. The historical settings range from cave-men-times to Alexander's successor states, from the English Civil War to the "imagi-nations," made-up German states of the eighteenth century, from Napoleonic button-counting to WWII and modern conflicts. Essentially, wargaming brings history to life, and seeing other people's projects on the web has introduced me to whole conflicts and nations I hadn't known existed!



Familiar with the Battle of Blenheim, 1704? I certainly wasn't until I saw this!
Figures painted b
y Matt Slade and Martin Holmes.

Beyond the historical, there are hypotheticals: the "imagi-nations" mentioned, "pulp" gaming, and "near-future" moderns. And then there are the sci-fi and fantasy sides of the hobby, whole huge communities within themselves - me and my buddies back home have enjoyed painting Games Workshop's Lord of the Rings (LOTR) figures for many years before I was even aware historical minis existed!

But what about the minis themselves? Again, they come in a whole slew of flavors. As far as scales, the smallest I've heard of are 2mm high, though those are stuck together in units. 6mm is a popular scale for small individual soldiers - if you want a superb example of what can be done with 6mm figures, head over to Mike's Leadpile, love him, and despair!


Yes, those are 6mm tall, just over half a centimeter! Courtesy of Mike's Leadpile.

Other popular scales include 15mm and 28mm. I only have experience with the latter - Games Workshop produces 28mm LOTR figs, and almost every Napoleonic soldier has a lead 28mm counterpart.

Wait, did you say Lead Figures?

Until now, historical miniatures have always been made of lead or some white metal. But recently, there has been something of plastics revolution, and I'm very lucky to have jumped into the hobby at a time when plastics are just beginning to offer a cheap, safe(?) alternative to pricey metal lumps!

High-detail "hard plastic" fantasy and sci-fi miniatures (the LOTR minis I paint!) have been available for a long while in 28mm plastic, but historicals were apparently too much of a high-risk investment, since tooling the machinery for detailed hard plastic is prohibitively expensive. "Soft plastic" 1:72 historical miniatures, which stand about 20mm high, have been available for decades, but many of these are less-than-optimal for wargaming. I used to purchase sets of 1:72's from my local hobby store, and they are quite fun to play with. I can vouch that some are "hard" enough (not bendy) and detailed enough to paint - I was always just put off by their small size - but, supposedly, paint and glue do not take well to their surfaces.



Plastic Soldier Review shows that painting these soft-plastic figs is quite possible! I own a set of these Brits and they are beautifully detailed.

However, "Hard plastic" miniatures, detailed enough for easy painting and scaled to fit existing historical lines, did not emerge until 2o08, when the Perry Brothers released 28mm American Civil War figures in hard plastic. Since then, the Plastic Craze has been sweeping the hobby! Hard plastic Napoleonics (so far, British and French), Romans, barbarians, "Pike and Shotte," and most recently WWII Germans have all emerged in the last three years. Victrix, which I ordered my first historical miniatures from, just announced it is preparing plastic Napoleonic Austrians - WOW! What an exciting time to be entering a new hobby!