Skip to main content

Submitted for Your Review. . .


Here are three views of the promised Stollenian (Prussian) hussar command vignette.  The uniforms are based on a couple of the Bryan Fosten plates and text descriptions in Frederick the  Great's Cavalry.  Once again, not perfect by any stretch, but we're getting there.  The figures were painted in my usual mix of oils with hobby acrylics for detailing.  Some lining was carried out using dark brown and a dark blue.  Where lining proved difficult, I washed those problematic, hard-t0-reach areas in dark brown before adding the detailing on top, for instance the silver lace, cord, and braid on the hussar officer waving his sword.




The trick for all of the hussar braiding on the dolmans and pelisses is to use a fairly small brush with a good point and to avoid flooding the bristles with paint.  Then, use a very light touch under bright lighting and just barely touch the tip of the bristles to the top of buttons and braid on the castings.  It doesn't take too much time or practice to get the right impression of braid and buttons.  It also helps things to stand out if you run a thin wash of darker color over these areas first, to offset the braid and buttons, making them stand out better against the admittedly very busy painted surfaces of the figures.  




The brushwork on these two figures and scenic base took 2.5 days, from Friday evening through Sunday morning.  I lavished much more attention on them than I would have on several squadrons of hussars though.  That said, I don't know that I am mentally prepared to tackle another 30-figure regiment of them any time soon.  But these two look reasonably good to my eyes, and will assume command of Stollen's light cavalry.  

Oh, and before anyone asks, the trumpeter's horse is not diseased or mangy.  He was my first ever attempt to render a piebald/skewbald.  Not sure if I'm completely happy with the results, but I was growing tired of the usual bays, chestnuts, duns, and greys you know.  At any rate, no more vignettes for a while now.  It's on to those eight singly based Minden, Fife & Drum, and RSM95 aides de camp next, and then the wagon and pontoon trains can take center stage.

-- Stokes 


A Tuesday Addendum. . . 

While I have a few spare moments this afternoon, always a dangerous thing, I've been letting my mind wander (equally dangerous).  In spite of my remarks above to the effect of "No more units of hussars for a while," I'm feeling the urge.  I fear that I might just have to bite the bullet and plan on adding three squadrons and a few regimental command figures (for a total of 30 figures and horses) of Minden Austrians in 2015-16.  Looking through my books and the Kronoskaf website, some of the uniforms are simply too pretty not to add to the growing Grand Duchy of Stollen collection.  So. . .   Of course, if I stumble upon a pretty example of Freikorps or Reichsarmee hussars in fur colpacks in the meantime, even better!  

On other fronts, we are awaiting another huge winter storm system that promises appreciable snowfall as we speak.  And here I thought we had to decamp for Minnesota, Northern Wisconsin, or Upper Michigan for Winter fun.  Certainly not this year!  Looks like some Nordic skiing and/or tobogganing with the Young Master is definitely in the cards for tomorrow afternoon and again on Thursday.  As I kidded an old friend the other day, you've just got to embrace the winter weather, bundle up, and get out there.  Barring dangerous windchills, or course, there is much fun to be had between late November and mid-March.

-- Von Tschatschke

Comments

Mosstrooper said…
Beautiful - like the porcelain type finish
Peter Douglas said…
Stokes

Great looking figures. I certainly would love to see a 30 figure regiment. And I like the piebald.

Cheers
PD
Keith Flint said…
You can stop this right away. I've been trying to finish a unit of RSM hussars for about 6 months now, and if I try to paint to your standards I'll be at it for another 6. Fortunately I have a method for painting hussar lace - I ignore it.

Very nice - looking forward to more wargames action from you in 2014.

All the best, Keith.
warpaintjj said…
I always like the colours you use and the gloss is right up my street. Sadly not a fan of that horse.

Like Keith says - looking forward to more wargames action from you in 2014.

Have fun, Jeremy
Fitz-Badger said…
Very nice! I think that horse coloring/pattern is going to be tricky to carry off well in your usual manner of painting horses. Looks like it would take some experimenting. Everything else looks great though!
(I like Keith's method for lace. That's the same method I usually use to paint eyes. ha!)
tradgardmastare said…
Great looking figures Stokes.
Conrad Kinch said…
Wonderful stuff Stokes - will they be seeing a table soon?
marinergrim said…
They look great Stokes.
I like to use the wash and highlight method for braiding and button loops. I find the GW washes very good for this Devlan Mud or the Army Painter equivalent Army Painter Quickshade Strong Tone (the Dark tone matches the old Badab Black very well).
WSTKS-FM Worldwide said…
Thank you for your kind and encouraging , men! Poor Mr. Skewblad Horse! It seems he's less popular than his fellow steeds. Well, back to the ol' drawingboard I suppose where equine colorings are concerned.

Best Regards,

Stokes
Old School ACW said…
They look rather juicy Stokes. I even like the horse.

Greg
WSTKS-FM Worldwide said…
At last! Validation. Thank you, Greg! Thank you. I'll not soon forget this kind gesture. ;-)

Best Regards,

Stokes
Steve Gill said…
I'd like to go further even than Greg and say that I think the skewbald is rather fine as a first effort.

Perhaps the brown is a little too broken up and could be in bigger patches. Also perhaps the brown could be the same shade but duller and thinner of pigment.

I suspect we're used to wargaming horses being of a limited range of types, quite an ingrained habit, and anything not bay or chestnut is difficult to assimilate visually.
WSTKS-FM Worldwide said…
Thank you, Steve! Yes, a similar thought had occurred to me here in the last couple of days as I was reviewing these photos and thinking how I might attempt/do this skewbald thingy again/ Certainly more more but toned/thinned down a bit. So, perhaps a different brown is in order for skewbalds?

Best Regards,

Stokes

Popular posts from this blog

Keepin' an Eye on the World Going By My Window . .

'The Nap at the Palace' by Jose Triado Mayol N ot much in the way of hobby-related activity happening here in the Grand Duchy lately.  Sigh.  And no surprise there really since there are only so many hours in the day, only so much mental and physical energy to spare, and you sometimes simply just have to give in and know when to say, um, "When!"  A glass of wine and/or evening yoga by the hearth with the Grand Duchess (who has practiced for over 20 years), and then off into la-la land.  Zzzzzzzzz.   More immediately, I'm recovering, mentally speaking, from a grueling Friday in which I was involved with three (online) conference sessions, one right after the other, followed by a 90-minute meeting at the end of the day. Also virtual. My brain has been mush ever since, so an easy, completely unproductive Saturday watching intermittent snow fall outside (no accumulation however) and drinking coffee while the visiting handymen completed some repair work down h...

Presenting the Anspach-Bayreuth Kuirassiere!!!

Here they are, with the rearmost nine figures still drying, three squadrons of the Anspach-Bayreuth Kuirassiere, now in the service of the Grand Duchy of Stollen. And now, it's onto that artillery!

And It's the End of September!!!

  Saxony's Ploetz Cuirassiers, an illustration lifted from the Kronoskaf website, which has thus far guided my spectacularly glacial painting of 30 28mm Eureka Saxon cuirassiers purchased all the way back in October 2016. A gray, cool Saturday here in Mid-Michigan with rain in the forecast. The Grand Duchess is away at a conference, so it's just "The Boys" here at home. The Young Master (almost 15) has retreated to his room for something or other following breakfast while I have stolen back down here to Zum Stollenkeller (masquerading as my office) with a second mug of coffee and both cats comfortably ensconced nearby. Enjoying the late morning and still in my pajamas! Not much planned for today beyond designing a couple of promotional flyers for workshops my department is presenting (small parties we will throw?) in October and November.  With maybe a bit of on the next podcast script. More important,  I am toying with the idea of returning for an hour or...