Well, well. Lately, my painting conscience isn’t hurting me as badly -- I’ve managed a few short painting sessions over the last couple of evenings on my Jaegers zu Fuss. Each man now has a “British Rifle Green” jacket, light blue facings, turnbacks, smallclothes, and breeches, and the bases are a uniform coat of Games Workshop “Goblin Green”. What a great color for bases, and how nice the battalion now appears on parade. Yes gents, another batch of digital photos will be here shortly. Rest easy!
Anyway, since I’ not showing a film to the students in my Film Noir course tonight, I’ll get in a little painting today too. It will be white wigs on the officers and NCOs this time with brown hair on the enlisted men. Tally Ho!
Comments
-- Jeff
http://saxe-bearstein.blogspot.com/
I favor the grass (or other) flocking. I suspect that this comes from the duller look that the ground takes on once I flock on the materials. This comes from the minwax building up on the base tops as it 'settles' off the main miniature.
I have also 'flocked' a unit in snow, using a pumice medium, white & blue paint. Then while the pumice & pain mix was still wet and on the bases I took a toothpick, dipped it in brown paint then 'smeared' the snow behind the footsteps of the battalions so as to make the snow appear more trodden on with the progressive 'marching' of the troops. The first time the unit was used the other player stated,
"Hey only finished and flocked miniatures in this game."
Whereupon he was called to take a closer look at the troops...
I might not like it, but they aren't my figures. He might not like mine either.
As long as they are painted, I'm happy.
That being said, nicely done bases really finish figures off . . . and that's true whether the bases are flocked, terrained, just green, are snow or whatever.
-- Jeff