For my submission this week, I've gone with a pair of 28mm World War 2 French AMR tanks from Army Group North Miniatures. I had started these two tanks before the main paint challenge back in November. Finally got around to finishing them.
The one on the left is an AMR 35 ZT1 armed with the 13.2mm HMG and the one on the right is a AMR 35 ZT3 armed with a 25mm ATG.
Keeping up with the points tally this will give me an additional 40 points for a total of 80 points.
Till next week and stay safe!
A miniature painting challenge created to provide a safe, supportive place for hobbyists to keep in touch during this time of social-distancing and isolation.
Friday, April 10, 2020
From ScottM: French AMR Tanks
From MartijnN: QCwk3 Slightly less small matters
For my third weekly task I have.. well, some 6mm of course! Some more miniature real estate, a Belgian/ Northern French house from TimeCast and a church from Total Battle Miniatures. The church is actually from their North-American range, but I think it will also do nicely as an Eastern European building.
Next, let's turn to bigger matters. Now, I am a slow painter and the rate at which some Challengers turn out beautiful 28mm figures never ceases to amaze me. I myself am quite happy to have been able to produce all of twenty-four 10mm figures and a gun from the former Perrin range (they are still sold by Magister Militum). I bought these in 2004 without having any clear purpose in mind (hey, they were a bargain) but never got around to painting them until I discovered the excellent website on the Altar of Freedom rules: 6mmacw. I believe that fellow Challenger Miles has some involvement in the matter... Now, these have obviously been designed with 6mm figures in mind but I don't see why 10mm wouldn't work so here are a brigade of Union infantry and a Confederate artillery battery.
These are for my modest first ACW project which aims to recreate the battle of Champion Hill (AAR on 6mmacw here). This is one of the smaller scenarios in the rules so should be doable. Only 9 more brigades to do!
I used contrast paints again, The Ultramarines Blue turned out just a bit darker than my other Union infantry and the pants are a bit less skyblue, but all in all I am not unhappy. The flag is from Pendraken.
Lastly, I made a small piece of terrain: a swamp. It is on an mdf base by Warbases, just a simple affair but I find it quite effective.
Thanks for looking, easy on the Easter eggs, stay safe and wash those hands!
Next, let's turn to bigger matters. Now, I am a slow painter and the rate at which some Challengers turn out beautiful 28mm figures never ceases to amaze me. I myself am quite happy to have been able to produce all of twenty-four 10mm figures and a gun from the former Perrin range (they are still sold by Magister Militum). I bought these in 2004 without having any clear purpose in mind (hey, they were a bargain) but never got around to painting them until I discovered the excellent website on the Altar of Freedom rules: 6mmacw. I believe that fellow Challenger Miles has some involvement in the matter... Now, these have obviously been designed with 6mm figures in mind but I don't see why 10mm wouldn't work so here are a brigade of Union infantry and a Confederate artillery battery.
These are for my modest first ACW project which aims to recreate the battle of Champion Hill (AAR on 6mmacw here). This is one of the smaller scenarios in the rules so should be doable. Only 9 more brigades to do!
I used contrast paints again, The Ultramarines Blue turned out just a bit darker than my other Union infantry and the pants are a bit less skyblue, but all in all I am not unhappy. The flag is from Pendraken.
Lastly, I made a small piece of terrain: a swamp. It is on an mdf base by Warbases, just a simple affair but I find it quite effective.
Thanks for looking, easy on the Easter eggs, stay safe and wash those hands!
JTinQT - Week Two Swiss Pike Drummer
Hi All
Week Two post and just a measly single figure - my Swiss pike project will take a while at this rate. Anyway this is a Foundry drummer and painted him in the more traditional red and white colours for Swiss troops.
Also managed to paint some disorder markers for the Swiss. Will play basic impetus and a Swiss army has high strength troops - lots of strong heavy infantry, so there are just 9 bases in total. Not sure if I will have enough markers as most of the time all my bases are in disorder. These are Warlord figures and got some more unpainted so will come back to those.
Am aiming for a 24 figure new pike block but not totally starting from scratch. Will be re basing these unused third rank base figures and a command base and skirmishers to add in. This picture is more motivational for me and hopefully can finish the first base next week.Will be totally re basing as always fun to play around with the figure positioning on a base.
All the best Jez
Week Two post and just a measly single figure - my Swiss pike project will take a while at this rate. Anyway this is a Foundry drummer and painted him in the more traditional red and white colours for Swiss troops.
Also managed to paint some disorder markers for the Swiss. Will play basic impetus and a Swiss army has high strength troops - lots of strong heavy infantry, so there are just 9 bases in total. Not sure if I will have enough markers as most of the time all my bases are in disorder. These are Warlord figures and got some more unpainted so will come back to those.
Am aiming for a 24 figure new pike block but not totally starting from scratch. Will be re basing these unused third rank base figures and a command base and skirmishers to add in. This picture is more motivational for me and hopefully can finish the first base next week.Will be totally re basing as always fun to play around with the figure positioning on a base.
All the best Jez
From NoelW: Another mixed bag
For my second Quarantine post, I’ve managed four different
offerings, as I’d hoped. However, I wanted to fill four empty cells on my spreadsheet,
and I’ve only managed three, because the first really belongs in my Walminster on Sealion
project and I already filled that cell last week. It’s six WW2 zombies, completing those
I began in Challenge X.
Not sure who makes these. They're very simple plastic models, easy to put together but of limited variety. Their uniform is German, but I've painted it in a more "generic" colour so they could be used in several different contexts.
Next are three Treemen.
My family have several fantasy armies,
though they’re rarely gamed with these days. My wife has both dwarven and elven
armies, with their own lead piles, which I manage occasionally to make small
inroads into. The treemen belong to the latter.
I don’t remember when she acquired these particular ambulant
trees, but it must be at least ten years ago, so the chance of figuring out who
manufactured them is pretty slim. She already has something like a dozen of the
beasts from many manufacturers. I think these are the last of the unpainted.
They're abut 40mm high, so I'm giving myself 8 points each for my running "score".
Next are 12 British infantry from the Cape Wars. They are Perry
Miniatures.
The figures in this range are largely in campaign dress, and I’m
always in two minds about campaign figures. Generally I prefer full dress, even when it's essentially unhistorical, as I like my toys to be attractive models,
as far as I can make them. It’s usually hard to make campaign dress appealing, and uniforms tend to look alike. I actually bought into this range because I like the look of the Xhosa, rather
than their British and Boer opponents. So I finished the Xhosa months ago, but
the Brits have been a few figures now and then.
My fourth offering is part if another project that chugs
along a few figures at a time. This is the Peninsular War. Napoleonics are my
central passion, particularly Waterloo. But it was the Perrys’ Spanish figures
that persuaded me to focus on the Iberian peninsular. These are beautiful
units, and I want them all – which, again, would be pretty unhistorical if
fielded as one army, but that’s basically what I plan to do. However, like most
Napoleonics, they take a lot of work to produce worthwhile results so, again, I only paint a few figures occasionally. I want to be able to field lots of pretty
units without impossible amounts of work, and my table is only 4 feet deep, so my Spanish
battalions are only 12 figures.
I’ve used the same approach with another lovely
Perrys' range, their Napoleon in Egypt range, though it looks like their
battalions will be expanding to 16 figures to look more convincing!
This battalion is from Espana’s Division. Carlos d’Espana
fought in several of the major encounters in Spain, though I’ve not been able
to work out exactly which ones these figures would be most suitable for. Anyone know?
Summary of my Quarantine so far:
Project
|
New Task
|
‘Points’
|
Old Task
|
‘Points’
|
Agincourt
|
||||
AWI
|
||||
Black Seas (1/700th)
|
||||
British in Egypt: 1801
|
||||
Cape Wars
|
12 infantry
|
60
|
||
Carthaginians
|
||||
Crusades
|
Command group
|
20
|
||
ECW
|
||||
French in Egypt: 1801
|
||||
Frostgrave/fantasy
|
3 Treemen
|
24
|
Frankie
|
5
|
Italian Wars
|
||||
Lord of the Rings
|
||||
Minden (15mm)
|
||||
Ottoman
|
||||
Peninsular War
|
12 Spanish
|
60
|
||
Republican Romans
|
||||
Sikh/Afghan Wars
|
||||
1860s British IF
|
||||
1880s, the Sudan
|
||||
Walmington/Sealion
|
3 Civvies
6 zombies
|
15
30
|
||
Waterloo
|
||||
WW2 Desert
|
||||
Zulu War
|
NNI
|
30
|
||
TOTAL
|
134
|
110
|
Labels:
Cape Frontier War,
Napoleonic,
NoelW,
Peninsular War,
Perry Miniatures,
zombies
From BenitoM: Boudicca Queen of the Iceni
My second chariot model of my Briton Army for Infamy! Infamy! is Boudicca Queen of the Iceni, and will double as commanding leader of the army too.
Boudicca led the revolt againts the Romans in 60/61 BC, putting to fire St Albans, London and Colchester until finally defeated by Gaius Suetonius Paulinus in the Battle of Watling Street.
This is a Wargames Foundry superbly sculpted metal model from its Briton range in 28mm. Both the driver and the Boudicca mini are very detailed and easy to paint, a real joy.
Next, I'm planning to finish the thrid chariot of the unit and then move to the foot warriors.
Boudicca led the revolt againts the Romans in 60/61 BC, putting to fire St Albans, London and Colchester until finally defeated by Gaius Suetonius Paulinus in the Battle of Watling Street.
This is a Wargames Foundry superbly sculpted metal model from its Briton range in 28mm. Both the driver and the Boudicca mini are very detailed and easy to paint, a real joy.
Next, I'm planning to finish the thrid chariot of the unit and then move to the foot warriors.
Labels:
28mm,
Ancients,
BenitoM,
Infamy2,
TooFatLardies,
Wargames Foundry
Iain W Pict skirmish archers for Dux Bellorum 28mm (70 points)
Here are some Pict archers for Dux Bellorum ,again almost finished at the end of the challenge, finally done now. They're a skirmish option in Dux Bellorum, so they'll be in units of four,I need to come up with a couple more figures, well three more as a spare Pict leader has snucked in as he was finished, he might well get press ganged into a Welsh army in the future.
The figures are primarily Black tree design with additional unknown Ebay types to make up the numbers.
The figures are primarily Black tree design with additional unknown Ebay types to make up the numbers.
14 x 28mm figures gives me 70 points to add to my previous score of 105, total 175 so far.
I've got some more Dux Bellorum lined up together with various other periods and I really need to get some Romans done! Next up probably wont be hairy psychopaths from the Celtic fringe,probably!
All the best Iain
From TimG - 1/32 WW2 Brits
Lowering the alarmingly high standards of paintwork on this blog is this batch of WW2 Brits for North Africa. These chaps are a mix of Airfix, Matchbox and Timpo plastic figures. They’re daubed to my usual ‘toy soldier’ style so it’s best not to look too closely at the photos!
More "Characters of Laarden, 1688"
“Did Sidney ever finish his very self-indulgent, collectible-collection
of the “Characters of Laarden” which he was painting for Challenge X?”
With everything going on in the world right now, I imagine that question has, quite rightly, been on no-one’s lips, and has not appeared in the world’s daily news-feeds. But the answer, dear Challengers, readers and friends is – “Yes, finally, this morning”.
That’s something which being stuck inside most of the day in quarantine can help with. Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve finished the remaining four “Characters” for the set, and here they are in all their indulgent finery.
So this blog post in the Quarantine Challenge features a glittering favourite (who may turn out to be a fraud), a tulip cultivator who may turn out to be a hero, two sisters and five Brothers, plus a collection of Laarden chickens.
So, now is the time to pour yourself a glass of the golden ale from one of Laarden’s breweries, or enjoy a cup of coffee brought to the town through the French blockade, and drift back to my alt-historical nonsense from the year of 1688….
The first of the “Characters” is Hannes van Breughel, Count of Ieper and Lord Commander of Laarden. Hannes is a converted Wargames Foundry figure, with a sword arm swapped for his originally cast-on ineffectually-waving arm, and with some green-stuff feathers and lace added. The trumpeter is Wargames Foundry, with just some added brass fret oak leaves on his hat – which is my field-sign for Imperial troops. The two soldiers are Dixon Miniatures, with more oak field-signs added, and painted in suitably earthy Flemish browns and ochres – to fit the colour scheme of the other Flemish regiments in my collection. The Imperial standard, in Hapsburg scarlet and yellow, is from Iain at “Flags of War” – whose website and flags I can heartily recommend. The base is 60mm MDF, 3mm depth, from Warbases.
Here’s the Lord Commander’s Character Card. I had in mind that the Flemish commanders for Laarden would be somewhat untried and untested when faced by an assault of the ferocity of the French army of 1688, led by the Marshals of Louis Le Grand. So, I tried to conjure something which suggested finery, but also presented with some slight nervousness about the Lord Commander's credentials in the field.
From one nobleman born to lead (from the right side of the Laarden highway), to another from the other side of the cart-tracks. Every crisis brings unusual heroes to the fore, and allows us all to be astonished by the quiet tales of sacrifice and determination. And this would be true in the alt-historical world of 1688, as well as our own.
Much remains to be written of Laarden’s powerful guild-system. To some, it might be a medieval hangover of restrictive trade practices; to others, it might be a reinforcement of community in the face of economic change. Whatever the academics might say, it’s true that the Laarden Guilded Company of Tulip Cultivators contributed significantly to the defence of the city in 1688, not least in the form of Captain Jan de Vroot, one of the redoubtable and irascible Guildsmen who found his moment to shine when the French army threatened the city.
I tried to depict Jan and his civic militia comrades in earthy browns and ochres, but added a drummer in yellow – a colour which I’ve been using for Laarden drummers and characters since the start of the project a few years back.
Captain de Vroot is a Wargames Foundry ECW dismounted cavalryman, with a converted arm and green-stuff additions. Other civic militiamen have green-stuffed feathers on their hats, and the standard bearers are carrying more flags from Warbases. The chickens, wandering the Grote Markt where the Company of Tulip Cultivators is assembling, are from Warbases. The groundwork is more brass fret from Scalelink. I bought it a few years back – it’s very expensive, but gives a great depiction of continental European paving. Since then, a couple of companies have produced rollers for green-stuff with the same pattern, so one of those is on my list to purchase. The “straw” is…well, straw from a floor mat. Finials on the standards are from Bicorne Miniatures.
And, here's Captain de Vroot's card for the collection:
As you know, my journey in the hidden bye-ways of 1688 Flanders is not just about the soldiers and commanders. Warfare in the late seventeenth century affected non-combatants, often in surprising ways, as I wrote about here on my blog a couple of years back. I wanted to add a couple of sisters to the collection, mainly (I confess) to have them helping me to take a Challenge X balloon ride on Challenge Island. So here are Agnes and Margriete van Rompaey, and their children....
I loved painting these old Redoubt sculpts – at least once I’d managed to undercoat them. They’re chunky, look very un-prepossessing out of the plastic bag when they arrived, but painted up really well. You can cover any of the slightly clunky facial casting by a careful paint job, and by adding some basing to take the eyes off the slightly mis-sculpted children’s faces!
I thought they’d be perfect to grace either the streets of Laarden, or one of the cluster of satellite villages around the city. The chickens are again from Warbases (as is the base) and the geese are (I think) from Magister Militum.
I experimented with a softer brown edging on the figures - which I thought worked quite well. It's less harsh than the black edging - perhaps more suitable for non-combatants, perhaps?
And finally, for Easter Week, I thought I’d add a small group of monks from the Laarden-based Brotherhood of Sint Jacobus. More from the Brotherhood in later posts on my blog (as men and women of religious orders are a real interest for me), but here they are worshiping and praying. I’m not sure whether their prayers are being offered for the safe delivery of Laarden from the French attackers, or for the safe delivery of this morning’s chicken eggs from the hens in the Abbey gardens – but you’ll have your own views on that, I’m sure.
The Brothers are a mix of Redoubt (the brother with the hat) and Perry Miniatures, the latter being from the First Crusade range but which make good monks in any period.
Looking through the lead pile, I seem to have collected far too many monks over the years, so more of the Brothers of Sint Jacobus may yet make more appearances in a blog post in the future. Blessed Be!!
Here’s their Character Card, complete with the Brothers’ cryptic possessions to be explained in a later blog post (stay tuned, folks…..you see what I did there?)
And here, finally, is the completed “Characters of Laarden” collectible-collection of cards for Challenge X. Did you get the whole set? And, perhaps equally to the point, would you be interested in collecting the rest of the 52 cards?
*******
Labels:
17th Century,
28mm,
Dixon Miniatures,
Laarden,
Redoubt,
SidneyR,
Wargames Foundry
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