Skip to main content

Plugging Away in the Grand Duchy

Not much happening in the Grand Duchy if Stollen recently. I’m still working at brushing on thick coats of the artists’ gesso on the 30 stollenian dragoons. Hopefully, I’ll finish with that particular task later this afternoon.

Painting on the basecoat with a large brush is terribly BORING, but it’s much more thorough and effective, in my experience, than spraying on a basecoat. I tried spraying basecoats on my 15mm Napoleonics a few times many years ago and was not pleased with the patchy coverage. I think I actually spent more time going back over the figures later with a brush and white basecoat, making sure all bare areas of metal were covered before true painting could begin.

On the same note, I’ve looked at the Plasti-Dip website and will give that particular product a try for the next batch of plastic figures I paint following the dragoons and the lovely RSM 95 grenadiers that the fair Grand Duchess Sonja presented to me for Christmas.

Finally, I built the FINAL (honest) hanseatic merchant’s townhouse structure over the last couple of days. Pictures will follow after painting, but basically it’s a row of three townhouses, each with a differently shaped gabled end. The third house butts up flush against the main structure (houses one and two), but it can stand alone, while houses one and two are actually a single structure that will be painted as two different houses. This description is kind of confusing, but photos will make everything clear.

Like my previous buildings, these stand on bases with balsa and cork chip “ruins” underneath, to represent destroyed buildings. I think that I’ve got enough buildings now to represent a single large town and small farm, a couple of smaller towns, or several small villages. Plenty of interesting old-school real estate to contest on the wargaming table in fact.

Oh yes, I almost forgot. The Saturday following Christmas, two boxes of Zvezda fir trees arrived from the Michigan Toy Soldier company. Together, they provide enough parts to snap together about two dozen evergreen trees that look remarkably like those used by Charles Grant Sr. in all those years ago in his various books and articles. If you desire an “Old School” look for your table-top forests and parks, I can recommend these tree sets firmly!

Comments

Bluebear Jeff said…
Stokes,

I've always liked those trees from "The War Game" . . . but I've never seen any for sale.

Please provide some pictures and the address, etc. of where you got them when you can.


-- Jeff
Anonymous said…
Stokes,

Interesting comment about the basing spray. Do you recall the make of the spray?
Anonymous said…
I find undercoating relaxing. Big brush sloppy paintwork and not worried about the mess.

Popular posts from this blog

The Eventual Anhalt-Zerbst Regiment. . .

  The Anhalt-Zerbst regiment musters in the drill square to sort themselves into platoons and companies during the coming weeks  Fall maneuvers if you will. A large dose of real life the last few days with the start of classes next Monday, various preparatory meetings, and finishing up a few other things this week.  But, I managed to sort out 60 or so Minden Austrian infantry from the pile and get 'em stuck to temporary painting bases.  Must carefully drill out the hands of several NCOs for flagpoles and pole arms this weekend before the usual basecoat.   I'm thinking of mixing the usual white gesso with the usual light gray to kill two birds with one stone so to speak.  Applying both base- and undercoat in one fell swoop as my grandmother used to say. In the meantime, the recently finished squadron of Saxon cuirassiers has been placed carefully in one of the clear acrylic boxes on my shelves until I have the suitable flag to affix.   -- Sto...

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...