Showing posts with label ADC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADC. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 October 2019

15mm Napoleonics: AB Napoleon & Staff, pt. IV


Well, whilst still not 100% finished, Napoleon and co. are getting there. I find that I enjoy working on basing. It kind of scares me, as well. I think it's all to do with my phobia of finishing stuff. I'm also having issues with aerosol spray varnishes clouding. All that really remains, however, is a very small amount of touching up. Mostly of mounts and horse tack. But also a little repainting due to clouding varnish.


This slightly more aerial view was shot in order to show a few little basing touches, like the wheel ruts on Boney's base, and the hoof-prints on several of the bases. The eagle-eyed observer might spot that these bases still have strips of masking around the edges. I'll remove these one the figures, their mounts and the bases are all completely finished. I'm not sure if I should finish the bases with grass green edging, or blue for Frenchies?

A Napo-centric focus here (note dual-Boneys: mounted and seated!).

Focus shifted to the rear of the group.

So, we have Poniatowki avec his ADC, Ney sans chapeau, also avec ADC, Napoleon (seated and mounted!), Roustam and a page, two Chausseur a Cheval bodyguards, and a couple of general purpose staff types. I had thought about one large command diorama type base (obviously not featuring both emperors!). But I think I prefer the flexibility this approach offers. I hope that by tomorrow, or Monday at the latest, these will be completely finished.

Wednesday, 20 August 2014

Painting Progress: AB Napoleon, Generals & Staff - Pt. I

More Work In (Very Slow) Progress


Mounting the horses on lolly sticks, and starting to undercoat.

Riders also undercoated.

As mentioned in a previous post, I intend to have command stands for the generals in my Russia 1812 wargaming, where my armies will be in 6mm & 10mm, in larger scales as well, as Callan and Schneider do in the Callan movie. To this end I have recently purchased a bunch of figures from the AB range, in 18mm, as well as some Perry/Foundry 28mm.

Blocking in base colours on the horses.

Barton can certainly sculpt horse-flesh!

As already detailed in several prior posts, I worked on an Allan Perry Napoleon Crossing The Alps figure, based on the famous and iconic David painting, in 28mm. That was my first proper venture into this area. Well, actually... I did also buy and paint up the Warmodelling 15/18mm Borodino Nap, some time back, which minis I may return to (at some point!). Anyway, putting to one side concerns over strict chronologies of past activities, I'm currently painting the 18mm AB figures, which are fabulous little masterpieces, sculpt-wise. I got Napoleon and staff (8 figures), Ney as an individual, plus Poniatowski with an ADC, all mounted.

The next three individual close-up pics demonstrate the beauty of the AB figures, I think (please make allowances for the unfinished state of my paint-job!).

Marshal Ney, sans chapeau! At this point I've superglued the riders to their horses.

Poniatowski (a one-piece casting).

Poniatowski's ADC (another one-piece).

I decided to do Anthony Barton homage in my approach to painting his little wonders, and undercoated them in Humbrol matt white enamel. As he rightly points out in a painting tutorial he did for Eureka Miniatures (which you can find here: Painting Small Figures by Tony Barton), the current fashion for undercoating in black isn't an approach many (if any) self-respecting fine artists might employ, as a dark undercoat kills the luminosity of any brighter colours layered over the top.

There's also what he refers to as the 'scale/distance effect', or some similar term, whereby small objects, which by their size appear farther off, need to be brighter than normal in order not to appear dull, etc. The guide is an entertaining as well as informative read, as for example, when, having lambasted black undercoat ('I realise it’s one shortcut to lining out the various parts, but I think it produces a very coarse effect') he goes on to damn drybrushing as 'another unrealistic abomination'!

Boney & bodyguard.

Roustam & another bodyguard.


Given his prowess as both a figure sculptor and painter, it's got to be worth reading this guide, although whether Barton's ideas will suit dyed-in-the-wool abominators conditioned by years of black undercoating and drybrushing is a moot point. Certainly I have seen for myself how much brighter colours are on miniatures when painting over a white base coat (but as a Fine Art graduate I knew about this anyway), but I have to say that in other respects - chiefly the fact I often felt I needed to do more to achieve darker under-painted areas (e.g. behind detail like fancy lace or braid) - I'm not sure if his approach isn't a bit too labour intensive for my purposes. 

With thousands of miniatures to paint, I can only contemplate this approach for these few showcase command stands.



More blocking in of base colours... slowly but Shirley...



I intend over this and the next however many posts to document the work on these minis. This might be a bit piecemeal, as I can't find the camera on which I took the first few pics, so (as things stand at the time of posting this) the pics showing now represent the second or third stage. Stage one was basing and undercoating in white. Stage two was blocking in the main colours.


I eventually decided to remount the figures individually, as the paint was rubbing off in various places when I was working with multiple figures glued to lolly sticks. I've re-based them, using UHU, on wine bottle corks, cut into two or three pieces. This means each mini can now be handled separately, and will hopefully therefore require less of the repeated touching up I was doing before.

They're such gorgeous figures they really do deserve the individual approach!

Lolly-sticks abandoned in favour of individual wine-cork mounts.

Thursday, 10 July 2014

Painting Progress: Traffic trauma, The Duellists, & Adler 6mm French ADCs


'Ooh... me nuts have fallen off!' Cue 'Carry On' style laughter...

The Right Irreverent Sidney James.

Actually the scenario was far from being funny: as I drove to work yesterday one of my wheels nearly came off the car! A weird rhythmic rattling noise had started a day or two earlier, but was quiet enough and regular enough I though it might just be a stone in the tread of a tyre (something similar happened a short while back, and it turned out to be caused by a metal bolt getting embedded in a tyre).

But this time the noise suddenly started to rather rapidly get much louder within a single short journey: it was warm and sunny, I had the driver's side window half-open, and in addition to the rhythmic clatter, a noise like a flock of angry seagulls was steadily growing. At first I thought it was some kind of avian activity, but as it continued for several miles, growing steadily louder, with hardly a bird in sight -and also altering noticeably whenever I passed any sound-reflecting object like a building - it dawned on me that it was most likely to be the car.

By the time I realised I was the source of this panoply of worrying noises the steering wheel had also started vibrating, gently at first, but quite rapidly turning into a pronounced juddering. The rapid deterioration in drive quality and safety meant I felt I really had to stop and investigate. Upon doing so I discovered that the driver's side front wheel was just about ready to fall off!! Two wheel-nuts - including the locking-nut - were missing, and on one of these the bolt it should attach to was also gorn... shorn right orff!

So I had to call the AA out. As I type this the car remains at the garage, leaving me stranded at home. All of which is not very welcome, from many perspectives. But there has been one upside: instead of spending my day teaching kids how to play drums I got to spend it painting more of the lead pile. What I'll be doing with the rest of the day depends upon the garage. I'm just glad I wasn't bombing along the M11, as I would normally have been doing later today. 

Anyway, enough of potential near-death events. Let's get on to something far more serious and important: tiny little soldiers!

I love these little fellows: they -  Adler 6mm Napoleonic French ADCs - came as a bag of 10 figures, six in the late-style shako (not ideal for my 1812 russian scenarios) and four in busbies. During painting I dropped the stick they're all glued to, and one of the plumes snapped off of a gent sporting a busby (I felt very lucky not to have trashed the whole bunch more comprehensively!). Can you guess which one?








I started these Aide-de-Camps on Tuesday, and photographed them Wednesday. Like all of my painted 6mm figs, they're not 100% finished, or based. One thing I'm holding off on at present is a final wash, to bring out any fine detail. I've dabbled with white-spirit thinned enamels (and even used them a bit on these in places), plus I have a tin of Army Painter 'Quickshade', which I've tried on a few larger scale figures. But I'm not entirely happy with either, results wise. Any suggestions?

The above pics show these little dandies from their right hand side, whilst the following are shot from their left.







At some point fairly soon I guess I'll also have to decide how to base the ever-growing ranks of painted troops... Hmm!?

I like to photograph my figures under different lighting conditions: I usually start with the light directly above them, a kind of electric midday, if you will; then I like to take some more pics lit from a lower angle, with a more late-afternoon/evening feel!





As usual I used all my available books as uniform ref. Didn't bother with the net this time. 

The Funckens were particularly useful during these painting sessions, as they have several pages showing multiple mounted ADCs. Very helpful! Rousselot's ADCs are, by comparison, a rather dull lot. I didn't stick rigidly to copying any of them, as such, but just used the reference material as a guide.

Practically all material that deals in any depth with the topic of Napoleonic uniform-ology is agreed that things could be quite confusing, what with constant changes to regulations, the whims and foibles of those paying for and providing the uniforms (which would I expect be especially true of such dashing young blades as these ADCs), and then the rigours of life on campaign.





Essentially these are all dressed as hussars, although their rank and privileges allowed them to jazz up the basics a fair deal. I do love the uniforms of the French hussars, they are the epitome of Napoleonic grandeur and swagger. Who could resist? 

If you find this kind of get-up seduces your eye, you should check out Ridley Scott's feature film debut, The Duellists, in which Harvey Keitel and Keith Carradine portray the historical characters Lieutenant Gabriel Feraud (of the French 7th Hussars) and Lieutenant Armand d'Hubert (ADC to Brigadier-General Treillard), who did actually become locked into a protracted period of duelling, as depicted in the film. 


The DVD cover of the version I have.

The film is kind of odd in some ways, and I may go into that more at some other time. One of the oddities is the contrast between the effort and expense lavished on the very convincing uniforms and the fact that Carradine and Keitel make no effort to modulate their strong American accents! When you get plummy English Frenchmen talking to sassy Noo Yoik or laid back Californy Frenchmen, it does feel a trifle weird.

'En garde!'


A rare pause in the action wherein Keitel is not actually attempting to kill Carradine.


These two publicity shot show the uniforms nicely, but the film itself is very, very beautifully shot, and much more atmospheric than these images suggest. These photos, which undoubtedly have a charm of their own, actually look rather 'technicolour', or perhaps even hand-tinted!?)