Skip to main content

The Results of the May 24th-July 24th Painting Challenge. . .

The almost finished combined battalion of Croats.  I need to add a few small shrubs and some weeds, courtesy of Woodland Scenics, around the rocks and at the base of the tree stumps. 


Here is the current work-in-progress, which I've been noodling around with since June 24th.  The painting has been done using a mixed media approach -- oil and acrylic washes over a white base coat, artists' acrylic gesso.  Delusions of painting grandeur on my part?  Maybe.  But there are many kinds of things used by actual artists in their work that are useful to the miniatures hobbyist as well.  The gesso is more generally used to prepare canvases for painting, depending on what a painter wants to achieve, but it also seems to work nicely on plastic and metal miniatures as a base for further painting.

Anyway, I hope to finish the final brushwork on the mounted hussar officer later this afternoon/evening  and then mount him along with the standard bearer and musket-armed officer to a single base, which will get a similar terrain treatment.  The battalion staff base will then be ready to assume its place at the head of, in the center of, or just to the rear of the new unit of Croats, depending on formation.  I'll add a few more (better) photographs once everything has been finished.  

In the meantime, I must come up with a suitable name for the unit, which will serve in either the Stollenaian or Zichenauer army, depending on the scenario. . .  and the shifting alliances of its commanding officer, one Count Ernst von Eyczing de Csiklos.  Don't let his dandy appearance fool you though.  An inveterate womanizer, the Count is nasty a piece of work by all accounts.  Von Eyczing de Csiklos is also a gambler and notorious cheat at the card table, who drives the men in his command ruthlessly.  Why, he is even rumored to have killed an opponent or two dueling with pistols.  Certainly not a fellow you want to turn your back on for a moment, especially when he commands this bunch of scoundrels, brutes, and scallywags on the field of Mars!


A slightly better shot of the unit in which you can just about make out the basing scheme I was nattering on about two weeks or so ago.


A closeup of the the battalion staff.  The mounted officer is not quite finished yet, but I'll take a crack at that tomorrow afternoon or in the evening.  The standard was painted entirely freehand and features a black eagle on the far side.  Once the mounted officer is done, then I'll mount the three on a single base and add terrain features in a style similar to the rest of the unit above.  Watch for a few more photographs in the next several days.

Comments

Stryker said…
They look superb. Will you be changing to scenic basing for all the figures now?
Thanks you! I'm pretty pleased with the way the unit(s) have turned out. No, I don't think think I'll routinely do scenic basing for anything else other than several planned vignettes of 2-3 mounted generals and their aides.

Best Regards,

Stokes
Mark Dudley said…
I am thinking of removing my SYW collection off Scenic basing and putting them on nice simple cardboard bases painted green.
It's a really nice, uncluttered look that does not distract from the figures themselves, which sometimes can be the case.

Best Regards,

Stokes
Prufrock said…
I like that painting desk of yours. It looks to be the kind of place you could sit down and lose track of the world for a while!

Popular posts from this blog

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...

Happy September 2nd!!!

    T his weekend, the question of what, precisely, constitutes an "imagination" came up in an online forum of which I am a part.  To be fair, the issue originates from further afield in a Facebook group that I am not a member of, but I weighed in with my own view.  The following was in response to the question posed yesterday (Sunday) morning by an exasperated member of my own rather more gentlemanly town square, who had been met with a strident response to information he shared about his (admirable) hobby activities on said FB group.  Here is, more or less, what I wrote: To my mind, the concept of imagi-nation(s) is a broad one.  It can range from historical refights or what-if scenarios/battles/campaigns between armies of a particular era, to completely made up combatants operating in a quasi-historical setting, to the rather generic red and blue forces of the Prussian Kriegspiel that examine a particular tactical problem, task, or exercise.   ...