Skip to main content

It's Leuthen Day 2020!

 

The 3rd Prussians attack Leuthen by G. Dorn.
 

A dark, chilly December Saturday here at The Grand Duchy of Stollen.  And after joining in a meeting of the Virtual Wargaming Club late Saturday morning, I plan on retiring to the painting table to undercoat the last nine Minden Austrian dragoons, which are part of that massive cavalry regiment I've worked on since last May.  

On the continuing rules and gaming front, The Young Master and I plan to playtest some charge to close combat rules tomorrow (Sunday) afternoon too.  We're planning our next proper game for Boxing Day on December 26th.

I also plan to build a village church with a few surprises in store based an article by Charles Grant in an early Wargamer's Annual from back in 2011 or 2012.  And, best of all, The Young Master has another belt test just before Christmas in his ongoing Tae Kwon Do sojourn, when he will very likely move into the upper echelons with, I believe, a purple belt.  From that point forward, he will be part of what they term 'Black Belt Prep.'  

So, overall a bit of welcome balance returning to life here at Stollen Central, helping to close out an otherwise pretty awful year.  Still, to borrow a line from the late Marty Feldman as Eyegore in Young Frankenstein (1974), could be worse.

-- Stokes

 

A Painting P.S.

There is nothing quite like the inspiration that comes from observing what others in the hobby are doing with their painting and collections.  Today's Virtual Wargaming Club meeting online was just such an occasion.  While I could only spare 60 minutes to join in, what an hour it was!  Top notch painting and enjoyable banter from 18 or 19 leading lights in the hobby around the world.  

As a result, the painting muse visited a few times later in the afternoon, and I've made some early headway on those last nine Austrian horse grenadiers.  They won't win any awards yet, but the light tan and yellow ochre acrylic base-/undercoats are dry, and I've also applied Citadel Warboss Green (ex. GW Goblin Green) to the bases.  

Tomorrow, in an around our playtesting of charge and close combat rules, I plan on applying fleshtone to faces and basic horse coat colors using Burnt Sienna and Sepia oils as well as acrylic Light Buttermilk for the trumpeter's grey mount.  How wonderful it is to feel the painting mojo return.

 

 The light tan, a mix of acrylic tan and white gesso, was applied first, followed by the yellow ochre, a darker gray for the trumpeter's horse and then, after dinner, the green on the figure bases.  Recently, I've been mixing basecoat and undercoat to help reduce the number of steps before completion of painting.  During a normal year, this might have helped speed along painting output somewhat, but with everything that has fallen into our collective lap -- and I mean society in general -- since the emergence of Covid-19 late last winter, that has not happened.  The best laid plans of mice and men.  Hurry up and wait, a concept with which ex-military personnel everywhere will be familiar, seems to be "the new norm," a phrase on everyone's lips six or eight months ago. 

Comments

tidders said…
horse grenadiers getting off to a good start :)
Ferd said…
I have visited Balzano whilst vacationing at Lago de Garda. You live in a wonderful place.
David Morfitt said…
Good luck with your hobby and game plans. Hope you have a good Xmas and New Year, after what has for all of us been a pretty peculiar and fraught year. Wargaming is a great hobby and refuge against reality. (I have to say, though, that 18th June 1757 is for me a more memorable day than the rather grim day of Leuthen... ;-))

All the best,

David.

Popular posts from this blog

And We're Off!!!

  Arrrgh!  Gotta go back into camera settings on my iPhone to bring all of the frame into focus.  Blast! Painting is underway on the 60 or so Minden Austrians, which are slated to become my version of the Anhalt-Zerbst Regiment of AWI renown.  More or less indistinguishable from Austrians of the era really, right down to the red facings and turnbacks, but the eventual flags (already in my files) will set them apart.   I went ahead and based-coated all of them over a couple of days lthe last week of August, using a mix of light gray and white acrylic gesso, before next applying my usual basic alkyd oil flesh tone to the faces and hands.  In a day or two, I'll hit that with Army Painter Flesh Wash to tone things down a bit and bring some definition to the faces and hands.   As usual, the plan is to focus on about 20 figures at a time, splitting the regiment roughly into thirds along with the color party and regimental staff.  Depending on ...

Sunday Morning Coffee with AI. . .

    A rmed with a second cup of fresh, strong coffee, I messed around a bit this morning with artlist.io using its image to image function in an attempt to convert my hand-drawn map from September 2006 to something that more resembles an old map from the mid-18th century.  And just like my experiments with Ninja AI in June, the results are mixed.   The above map is pretty good, but Artlist keeps fouling up the place names and has trouble putting a faint overlay of hexes across the entire area.  Hexes, admittedly, are not likely to be found on any genuine maps from the era in question, but there we are.  Frankly, I prefer the appearance of the Ninja map, but there were problems getting it to correct its errors.  Grrrr.  As is the case with so much having to do with the various AI's out there now, the output generated is a direct result of the prompts entered.  For text alone, and when you develop a lengthy, highly detailed prompt, it is...

Continued Regional Map Revisions. . .

F ooled around a bit more with the revised map just before and after dinner this evening, using the Fotor app to reinsert missing text .  I also removed a few other things using the 'Magic Eraser' function, which works surprisingly well.  Now, we're getting somewhere.  I just have to figure out how to ensure that the text is all a uniform font style and maybe figure out a way to add a few bunches of trees to suggest forested areas,  Ninja AI is not always entirely cooperative to the tune of "I'm sorry Dave.  I can't do that." -- Stokes