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Monday, May 3

Minden 1759 Project (002) - Condé-cavalerie

The latest addition to my 15mm Seven Years War French Army based on the Battle of Minden in 1759 is the 2 squadron regiment of Condé. These figures are Blue Moon Miniatures.

Monday, April 26

Minden 1759 Project (001) - La Rochefoucauld de Surgère Cavalerie

 A 2 squadron regiment forming part of Fitzjames dvision at the Battle of Minden, 1759.

These are old 'Old Glory 15s' - seven of them are from the French cavalry pack plus one from which needed ahead swap, replacing a bearskin with a tricorn.




 

Wednesday, April 14

1809 Project (05) - The first Hungarian Battalion is complete

This is the 1st Btn of Infantry Regt 61 St Julien. 3 Battalions of this regiment formed part of Colleredo's brigade in the Austrian VIII Corps at the battle of the Piave in May 1809.

They have the distinctive sky blue trouers and this regiment had 'grass' green collar, cuffs and piping.

The flags are from Napflags and scaled for 10mm figures. That was a bit fiddlybut you only have to do it once.

For more information about the project check out the video on my You Tube channel

Thursday, April 8

1809 Project (04) - Hungarian Infantry Officers (Work in Progress)

I have been working on the first Hungarian units for Archduke John's army. These 3 officers will command the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Battalions of Infantry Regiment 61, St Julien. Infantry Regt 61 along with Infantry Regt 27 formed Colloredo's brigade in VIII Corps.

This figure is modeled with small bag or bundle on his back. It's not clear what it is intended to represent. In the end I chose to paint it in the same grey I used for the rolled greatcoats on the rank and file figures. The 1st battalion is progressing and will be the next unit completed.

Update - the mysterious bundle has been identified as a pistol in a holster by a very kind contributor on the Pendraken Forum - Thank you John Cook

Friday, April 2

1809 Project (03) - First French Unit Complete

My first unit of Eugene's army in Italy in 1809 has been finished. This is the 1st Btn of the 102nd Line. This battalion and the 3 others from this regiment formed part of Grenier's division at the battle of Sacile and took part in most of the engagements that followed in Eugene's campaign to first drive the Austrians from Italy and then to take the army into Austria itself.

 


The 6 company organisation adopted by the French gave each line battalion 2 elite companies (of genadiers and Voltigeurs) and 4 centre or fusilier companies. I have used a 32 figure unit to represent this and in my set up the elite companies have 4 figures each while 3 of the fusilier companies have 6 figures. The 2nd fusilier company is represented as a single rank of 3 figures behind the command group of an officer, the eagle bearer and a drummer.



Friday, March 26

1809 Project (02) - 10mm Napoleonic French Infantry Test

At the time I ordered the pack of Austrians from Pendraken, I also ordered a pack of French fusiliers. (I did forget I would need grenadiers and voltigeurs in order to be able to do a full battalion and that has proved frustrating). Here are a few work in progress pictures.

The Eagle bearer and drummers.

Information on drummers in 1809 is a bit sketchy. It appears there was a lot of leeway and many colours would have been used. For this test I simply reversed the red and white on the turnbacks and lapels.

There is also a bit of debate about the nature and numbers standards and even eagles carried by each regiment. It appears that from 1808(and I'm not sure when in 1808) an instruction was given that only the 1st battalion of each line regiment would carry an eagle and a flag, but this took some time to be implemented so may not have been universally applied by April/May 1809.
Here is a sample of the fusiliers. The lighting today is not good. I have not highlighted the blue. I have decided on the highlight colour I will be using but as it will be a mix and I don't want to do these until I can do the grenadiers and voltigeurs at the same time.
I had a little trouble with the pompom colours. The well known green, light blue, aurora and violet scheme for differentiating the fusilier companies dates from 1810. In 1809 an earlier scheme of dark blue, aurora (pinky orange), violet and crimson was used.

Structuring my French battalions also proved to be a challenge. I am not going to worry about the theoretical difference in strength between the French, Austrian and Hungarian units. In my set up, line units are all going to be 32 figures. So a French battalion will consist of the following figures; 4 Grenadiers, 6 fusiliers with dk blue pompoms, 3 fusiliers with aurora pompoms with a'command' group of 3, then 6 fusiliers with violet pompoms, 6 fusiliers with crimson pompoms and finally 4 Voltigeurs.

Thursday, March 18

Starting out on a new Project - The 1809 campaign in Northern Italy

I have begun a new Project. This will be based on the campaign that started in Northern Italy and went on into Austria fought between the Franco-Italians commanded by Price Eugene de Beauharnais and the Austrians under Archduke John.I will base the forces on one of the battles thattook place in this theatre but I am not sure which one at the moment. The photo is of my first 'test' unit for the conflict - 2nd btn Infantry Regt 27 Strassaldo. I am pleased with how it has come out (although I cannot say the same for the photo which is quite dark).

The Completed French Army of the North 1871

The General Faidherbe's Army of the North on January 3rd 1871, fielded 2 Corps; the 22nd and the 23rd. Each Corps was comprised of 2 divisions, and each division had 2 brigades. In total the Army of the North had 56 battalions of variable quality and levels of training and 15 batteries of artillery (note: there were no mitrailleuse batteries in the oob).

Saturday, March 13

Prussian Artillery Batteries
The Generals of the French 23rd Corps at the Battle of Bapaume, January 3rd 1871
The battlefield of Bapaume. January 1871 was cold, miserable, and snowy. The French Army of the North, moving to relieve the siege of Peronne was confronted by the Prussian 15th Division at the small town of Bapaume.
This has been a long project, but with these last figures it is now completed. Time to move on to the next project!

Sunday, February 21

The last combat units for the Army of the North

The last French batteries are complete.
The Army is finished except for some generals which I hope to add shortly.

Wednesday, February 10

French Army of the North 1871

My 10mm French force for the Franco-Prussian War. 3 divisions of the Army of the North in January 1871. The fourth, National Guard division, is still in the process of assembling.

General Derojja, Commander of the 1st Division of 22nd Corps


 

Saturday, July 23

The scorpion bolt shooter is coming along nicely now. I had a bit of a wobble over how to paint it. It is a wood and metal construction and I have always had a bit of an issue with painting wood. I think I've got a workable solution now. I have tried many times to do a grain effect but every time it just looks wrong. I'll take some pictures and load them up soon.

Monday, July 18

Simon Hall's new ancients rule set came out to day and I have signed up and ordered a copy. These are called "Mortem et Gloriam" and they look pretty nice. I am hoping this is a really good successor to DBM because I really enjoy ancients wargaming.

Since the end of the DBM 'glory days' I have struggled to find something I am happy with.  I still play a bit of DBM but the pool of players is quite dispersed and relatively small

What follows is only my opinion and I know others see things very differently and I don't want to stop people enjoying the system of their choice.

FoGAM seemed to me a retrograde step more akin to the old WRG systems rather than a progression. I hated the one and only competition I entered - never felt like that before and didn't like it at all.

DBMM seemed to me to take us even further down the WRG rabbit hole.

AdlG just doesn't feel right, the 200pt game seems a bit like big DBA. I have tried to like it but it doesn't quite do it for me.
Now painting up a Warlord Games Scorpion bolt shooter and crew to go with the 24 legionaries I finished in the week. This is metal not plastic and so far it is looking pretty nice. It was a bit expensive though at £12.
I will take a few pictures over the next couple of days.

Sunday, July 17

Finished painting the Warlord Games plastic Romans and have stuck them on to bases. I have still to finish the bases themselves but I will leave this until I can do everything at the same time.

There are a couple of things to note: first 4 figures fit snuggly onto a 60mm wide base and even better on a 20mm deep base. I was expecting problems here but everything worked out ok. However, I cannot place them in a column. The pila get in the way. I have decided to do the next batches of Legionaries with sword. This means the plum wielding models will end up as the back rank.

Friday, July 15

OK - the LittleBigMan transfers are a bit fiddly to cut out but they then go on very easily.

They are quite sticky so you have to be careful when positioning them and if access to the shield is restricted that can be a challenge. I have done about half (14 out of 24) and that took about an hour.

Thursday, July 14

Latest Project

Just painting up some 28mm Caesarian Romans from Warlord Games. These are the first (non GW) plastics I have painted since the Airfix ones I had back in the 60s and 70s. I am really impressed. The moulding is clean and crisp; the detail of a high standard and easy to paint.

One small worry is will they fit on the base but that aside I am very pleased.

I have to add the LittleBigMen transfers tomorrow and I am a little anxious about that - it would be a shame to spoil the work to date but how hard can it be!

Thursday, May 14

It's been a while but I might just start this up again.

Friday, October 31

SS Tigers

I have just finished these Tigers from s SSPz Abt 101 in Normandy from June to August 1944.