Skip to main content

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 how things go, I might jump ahead to the next batch in the queue to tackle larger and easier areas before bouncing to take care of more detailed bits as the mood strikes me.  We'll see.  Sometimes, and despite best intentions, one needs a mental break from the attending to the tiny details.  Larger, relatively mindless areas of the figures provide a chance to catch one's mental breath while still moving forward with the project.

Now, the eagle-eyed among you will note that a few figures remain in their natural metal state.  That is simply because I have yet to drill out their hands for pole arms and flagpoles.  But given their small number, it will be relatively easy to base coat these figures once that step has been addressed and catch 'em up to the rest of the unit.  

And as a final caveat, based on a mistake I am really too old to have made, use brushes with good points!  After painting the flesh tone yesterday, I stupidly grabbed a cheap brush to paint the black items late in the evening.  While painting the hats around the faces, flecks on black from stray bristles got all over the foreheads and cheeks on several figures.  What was I thinking?

Turns out, I wasn't. 

I should have stopped immediately and switched to one of my Winsor&Newton Series 7 brushes at that point.  But do you think I did?  Oh, no.  I foolishly forged ahead continuing and compounding the problem several times over.  Which means that today, September 1st, I'll need to redo the faces of several figures before moving onto the next step.  Grrrrr.

The phrase 'ass backwards' keeps going through my mind this morning.

And the morale of the story?  Well, there are probably several.  But always, always, always use good quality brushes with good points for everything other than base coats and varnishing.  Oh.  And even experienced painters can make mistakes.  The clouds of quietly muttered blue language from last night are still hanging in the air this morning here and there in Zum Stollenkeller.  Kids, don't try this at home.  

Stay tuned!

-- Stokes 

Comments

Andy McMaster said…
Good to see a nice big unit under way. I've never used gesso. Occasionally ponder giving it a try. Black though for me...
pancerni said…
Is that what you meant by " restarting the f stop ?"
pancerni said…
Is that what you meant by " restarting the f stop ?"
caveadsum1471 said…
Nice large unit, I tend to use cheap brushes often, sometimes without a point, occasionaly I reward myself with a sable, when there is fine detail to be had!
Best Iain
Jiminho said…
I am sure these will earn a place of distinction on your table. One advantage of age, ... er experience, is weakened eyesight which filters out stray black paint splotches, at least around here. I have just looked at your map published this summer. I'm very impressed, both for the tint and the added details that give a period feel and the lack of details within the GD of S, which invite the imagination. Bes,t Jim

Popular posts from this blog

A Little More Brushwork. . .

    A little more brushwork on the first batch of (my version of) the Anhalt-Zerbst Regiment yesterday (Saturday).  Taking a different tack this time and addressing many of the details first before the white coats and other larger areas of uniform.   The eagle-eyed among you will notice that I've painted the (dark) red stocks of the enlisted men.  Always a difficult and frustrating item to paint, it made sense to paint from the inside out as it were and get that particular detail out of the way first rather than try to paint it in later after much other painting has been accomplished.  Trying to reduce the need for later retouching of other items on the figures you understand. Hopefully, I will be able to get back to these later today after a second trip back to the Apple Store for help with a couple of new iPad issues and, following the return home, some revision of Google Slides for tomorrow's meetings with my students. -- Stokes P.S. And according t...

Basic Reds Done at Last. . .

  S till quite a way to go with the current batch of 20 human figures and a horse (of course), but they're actually starting to look like something after all of the red distinctions.  Quite a bit of painting in hour-long sessions the last week as and when time has allowed.  Mostly applying the basic dark red to facing areas and turnbacks followed by the inevitable touch-ups to clean up wobbly edges and those misplaced, minute splotches of Citadel Khorne Red.   They're looking like so many Austrian infantry regiments of the era at this point, but the eventual flags will turn them magically into the Anhalt-Zerbst Regiment, more or less, of the AWI period.  But I'm getting a bit ahead of myself. One frustrating point (ahem) of sad discovery.  I've started trying to use those Winsor & Newton 'Series Seven' brushes (#1 rounds) purchased last spring, and the blasted things simply will not keep a point.  Very frustrating since I have heard over the y...

It's Early Days Yet. . .

M aking some early progress with Batch A of the Anhalt-Zerbst Regiment over the last several days/evenings.  Nothing terribly exciting just yet, but the basic black, brown, and flesh areas are done as are the green bases, and gray undercoat.   The latter two areas needed some careful retouching early in the week.  Next up, the neck stocks.   I might just do these in red for the enlisted men although some of my source material suggest they were black, but I always look for an excuse to shake things up a bit.  Any errant splotches of red (or black) can be covered with another application of light gray before I move onto the next step.   "Giddy up!" as one Cosmo Kramer might have said. -- Stokes