Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 December 2019

Painting review for 2019 - Confederation of Rhine

Just over 500 28mm Napoleonic figures painted in 2019, here's a list of links to them. Mostly Baden, Bavarian and Saxons, and good to get substantial numbers of these contingents ready. They are needed for 1809-13. A quieter year in terms of painting, given some years I've done 1000 figures, but I did more gaming this year which was good!

Total painted in 2019: 75 mounted, 423 foot, 20 guns, 2 buildings.


Baden
4 Baden Command
48 Baden Line Infantry
12 Baden Jagers
12 Baden Light Dragoons
4 Baden artillery and 16 crew


Bavaria
12 Bavarian Schuetzen
24 Bavarian Light Infantry
96 Bavarian Line Infantry
4 Bavarian Artillery and 16 crew


Saxony
3 Saxon Command
15 Saxon Light Infantry
24 Saxon Leib Grenadier Guard
96 Saxon Line Infantry
12 Saxon Chevauleger
12 Saxon Leib Kuirassier Guard
12 Saxon Zastrow Kuirassier
4 Saxon Artillery and 16 crew


Duchy of Warsaw
12 Polish Uhlans

French
8 French Artillery and 32 crew

Terrain
Granary
Windmill


Other stuff...
Ancient: 2 Scythed Chariots and 16 Galatians
Modern: 1/285th Cold War East Germans


Plans for 2020

I didn't get quite enough done to do Aspern Essling in 2019, though at least the Granary is ready! This battle should be on the cards for later next year. I will have to find some other smaller action to play in the next week or two, likely something 1809, maybe part of Abensberg.  

Local wargames club is also planning to have a large Dresden refight in 2020, though that will depend on us having enough Prussians and Russians available!

On the painting desk right now are another 12 artillery limbers! French, Austrian, Bavarian, Saxon, Dutch. So they will be up next.

Friday, 18 January 2019

Painting review for 2018 - year of pants...

Here's the review of my 2018 painting. A rather meagre total of 416 28mm figures for the year, with 130 cavalry and 286 infantry completed. Not much compared to the 1000+ figures of previous years.

First reason for this is that I spent a lot of free time playing games rather than painting, with Ancients and Sci-Fi as well as Napoleonic games seeing the table.  So fair enough perhaps.

The second reason was pants - Hungarian pants. I painted 200 pairs of Hungarian pants with their thrice damned knots in 2018, and I now have over 400 of them total. I've committed to never painting any more! Then there were the Hussars, Uhlans and Command figures, many of which were quite individual and had much time consuming lace and other detail to paint.

Additionally there were 28 Galatians notable for their lack of pants, and clothing generally...

So all up not a great tally, but at the same time I'm glad to have these troublesome units behind me. Plus I consolidated my terrain collection with some much needed hills, templates and fortifications  for historical scenarios, and made a bunch of casualty markers, so not dissatisfied!

Austrians
32 Austrian Generals and Staff (and more rebased)
24 Cuirassiers, 24 Dragoons and Cheavauleger
36 Hussars
12 Uhlans
60 Grenz
72 Hungarians
42 Hungarian Grenadiers


French
24 French Generals and Staff (and more rebased)
54 French Voltigeurs (+ another 36 rebased)

Terrain and stuff
Casualty Markers
Hills and Templates
Gabion Fortifications (can be seen in this battle report)

Ancients
28 Naked Galatians

Sci Fi
30 Sci Fi Scouts (no picture)

Wednesday, 9 August 2017

Painting - Assembling Artillery Limbers

As promised here's a short "how to" blog post on assembly of Napoleonic artillery limbers. Hopefully it is of some assistance to some Napoleonic wargamers or modelers out there, including me if someone has even better ideas. :)

Limbers are one of those Napoleonic models with a reputation for difficulty. This is due to the quantity of parts and challenges of (a) knowing how they are supposed to go together, and (b) actually putting them together! Questions like "how do I do the ropes to attach them to the horses?" are prominent. I put off doing my first limbers for some time because of these issues. However, as for many things the anticipation was worse than the actual activity. Advice from the Napoleonic internet community was also invaluable, particularly that from Stephen Walsh from the Facebook Napoleonic Wargamer group as I've mentioned in a previous post.

So first up here's some Perry Miniatures Austrian Limbers, showing all the parts cleaned up and ready for assembly. 

And here they are glued together. I just used super glue for this. Great models, even if the parts are a bit delicate and fiddly.

And below, here they are painted up, with ropes added once the rest of the limber was mostly painted. The rope I'm using is Gale Force Nine Three Strand Rope. On each limber I added 8 pieces of rope, 2 pieces to each of the four spindles. Each piece was 2.5cm long (though 2cm would have been ok as I discovered later). The ropes were just glued on with PVA glue.

A tip here is to also put dab of PVA glue on the loose end of each rope to stop it unravelling. You can see some of the ropes starting to unravel in photo below. Eventually I decided to coat each rope with a mix of PVA glue diluted with water to hold it in shape too.  My French Limbers went better I think because I learned a few things from doing these first Austrian ones.

Once the glue had dried, each rope was then drybrushed with a muddy light grey to bring out the texture.

Here's the Gale Force Nine rope I used. I know some other people use copper wire twisted together to make a rope - wound with a drill bit.

With the limber ready, I then placed the horses on the base, "dryfitting" everything to make sure the spacing was ok before gluing the horses to the base. The bases I uses were 50mm x 150mm.

Ok so that is the preparation for the Austrians. Now onto the process for the French Limbers and to show the final assembly stages. The Perry French Limbers are considerably simpler, in that they have only two wheels and the main body of the limber. Unfortunately they are also incomplete. I guess these were some of the first Napoleonics the Perry's sculpted in the current ranges, whereas the Austrians were done later and more detail was judged worthwhile.


As you notice these Perry Miniatures limbers are not provided with the front crossbar and spindles, which is somewhat disappointing.

I made a pretty rough and stylised version out of cardboard, replicating the lengths of that at the rear of the limber. The cardboard was then coated with PVA to help strengthen it.

Here it is undercoated and ready for painting. The front scratch built assembly is a bit too bulky, but will do the job of holding the ropes and is not so noticeable at a distance. No doubt a more skilled model maker could make a superior version but this was enough for me.

And below are massed limbers painted, with ropes attached as above, and all the horse teams painted and ready for assembly.

The horses are glued onto the base, the base is flocked, and then the limber is placed in position but not glued. You'll notice in the photos below that the ropes are not yet attached.


Once I have the limber in the right sort of position, I put a small drop of super glue where the rope attaches to each horse and connect it using a pair of tweezers. I scraped away a small amount of paint from the model with a needle file to give a good connection on the first ones, but then decided that wasn't really necessary on later ones. 

I do first one side. 

Then the other.

If the rope is being glued under a blanket the length doesn't matter so much and you can just glue it in place. But where there is a specific connection point it must align with the rope must be trimmed to the right length at this stage. Here's a top view to show one of the ropes that needed trimming to match up with where it attaches. (3rd from left at the front).

Using a pair of fine scissors I cut it to the right length, and then glue it as for the other connections. You don't need to get it exactly right as a bit of slack in the rope looks ok.

Lastly after all the ropes are connected, I glue the wheels to the base, and that is the limber done.

...Though actually it wasn't quite done, as after this I went and added some extra blobs of slow setting epoxy glue for extra strength where the ropes meet the horses. Then when that was dry I went and touched up the paint job in these areas. This epoxy glue step was not really necessary but should give the whole thing even more strength to survive handling.

So there we are, I hope that is helpful for someone out there! My first limber took me about an hour of fluffing around working out how to attach the ropes, but the later limbers took about 5-10 minutes each to glue on all the ropes which was much better!

A better look at these completed limbers can be found in previous posts.


I hope that is helpful to someone out there. Good luck and please share any tips or thoughts on you might have in the comments below!

Saturday, 7 January 2017

2016 Painting review and thoughts...

I've just completed a tally of my 2016 painting. Here's a list with links. Over 1000 28mm figures. Plus given discussion with two wargaming mates yesterday, I've added a few thoughts on how to get many figures painted!



28mm Napoleonic painted in 2016



The vast majority of my painting time was spent on Napoleonics in 2016...

96 French Old Guard
96 French Middle Guard
96 French Young Guard
96 French Artillerie de la Marine
96 French Line
36 French Guard Cavalry
16 French Guard Horse Artillery crew + 4 guns
1 French Cantinière

78 Polish Line
36 Polish Vistula Legion
12 Polish Uhlans
12 Polish Krakus
16 Polish Foot Artillery crew + 4 guns
16 Polish Horse Artillery crew + 4 guns
2 Polish General

72 Austrian Hungarian Infantry
24 Austrian Jagers
12 Austrian Uhlans

(Plus some bridges and churches, and basing up dozens of trees which I haven't yet posted)

28mm Ancients painted in 2016


These have expanded since the last time I mentioned them.  In total I painted the Macedonian force shown below. More pictures here.

153 Phalanx
50 Peltasts
8 Slingers
60 Cavalry
3 Elephants

6mm Sci Fi painted in 2016


6mm hardly counts in comparison to 28mm but hundreds of these were painted too. In total effort probably still less than for a single Napoleonic Guard Cavalry 28mm unit though...!  But small scales are the way to go if you want very fast painting and larger games on smaller tables. It is particularly suitable for 'modern' style conflicts, though I've seen some very nice Napoleonics in 6mm too. My Hordes of Things blog is for all my non-Napoleonic wargaming.

Total 28mm Figures Painted in 2016


950 Infantry
134 Cavalry
12 Guns
3 Elephants and 6 crew

So a total of 1105 28mm figures total last year (or 1239 figures if horses also count as a figure each). I'm slightly tempted to get it all out on the table to have a look, but that's quite a mission so not yet! I'm well on the way to some huge Napoleonic games though, and I must order some more KR storage boxes for cavalry...

This blog also passed the 100'000 view mark a few months ago and is rapidly closing on 200'000.

Thoughts on Mass Painting... How?



A few thoughts on this topic to close. Quite few people have expressed surprise at the number of figures I've managed to get painted over the last few years, including two wargaming mates visiting yesterday. It initially surprised me too, as I never considered that I'd be able to get all this done on top of work and time with wife, friends, wargaming and so on (not to mention writing journal articles, playing computer games, watching a few movies etc).  

However, considered in the cold light of reality I'm not sure it is that much. It is afterall a grand total of about 3 figures a day. Doing that number of figures or even a third to half of that amount should be quite achievable for most people I would think (aiming for a lower amount if you have younger kids or health issues for example, higher if not). And imagine what could be achieved if retired, provided hands and eyes are still sufficiently competent...!

Even if budgeting a full hour for a 28mm figure, and so 3 hours a day to paint 3 figures a day, most people spend more time than that watching TV each day. So painting while listening to TV would achieve that goal. And these days, fortunately there are instead vast numbers of free audio podcasts, audio-books and so on that you can listen to while painting. I think the easy availability of these has made a big difference to my painting volume, as I can't imagine painting for very long without listening to something beyond just music. Recently I've been listening to the excellent Wars of Coalition podcast by Mark Jessop. Before that it was an audio version of Origin of Species.

I don't paint every day, but even an hour or two on most days really starts to add up. Especially if you use the odd weekend or holiday to give the process a boost. Do it while listening to audio material and it's not even replacing other activities. Much of what I listen to has some bearing on my work as a psychologist and manager, or to science/history in general, and there are also many podcasts on wargaming these days too. Perhaps some extra motivation comes from working as a health professional where the fragility and transience of human existence is daily evident. It reminds me not to waste time on lesser activities.

Of course to get speedy it is also very important that you don't paint just  a couple of figures at a time. Instead batch paint them as this previous post suggests and you'll race through them faster. And if you're painting non-Napoleonic figures it will likely be even faster due to lower level of detail. See my other painting articles in the sidebar for more tips I find helpful.

Anyway, I hope that brief analysis provides some inspiration to someone out there. Set yourself what you consider an ambitious but achievable goal and go for it!

Thanks for reading, and do let me know in comments below of any ideas you find helpful in getting many figures painted!

Monday, 22 February 2016

Painting - Assembling Plastics

Plastic figures, what's the best and quickest way to assemble them? An important subject for those interested in building hordes of them! Therefore I thought I'd put my own method forward on the chance it might help out a wargaming comrade somewhere in the world - and of course to see if anyone else has any ideas for improvement! :)

Introduction

Hard plastic figures are a relatively recent innovation in 28mm Napoleonic and other wargaming eras. They have increased affordability of large armies for many people. They also offer a greater variety in pose than most metal ranges, and they are very easy to repose or convert.  An additional virtue is that they don't weigh as much for luggage purposes on aircraft or generally transporting them around. Downsides generally cited include greater fragility of bayonets for some ranges (though I haven't noticed this with mine). Also assembly is usually required - though at least you can get glues to do this that are less nasty and annoying to use than the epoxy or super glues necessary for metals. 

Depending on the kit you get, either a little or a lot of assembly is required. Wargamers generally prefer little assembly of course. Modellers want more variety. I'm a wargamer. Perry kits generally have the least assembly, Victrix French Guard and Austrians a little more than that but not a great deal more, and the earlier Victrix British and French have the most assembly required.

Assembling the blighters does seem to be a headache or source of confusion for some out there though, and I have some empathy for this experience from my first attempts. But it gets better with experience. Therefore as I was assembling my next lot of 'plastic fantastics' I decided to do a post describing how I go about it. No guarantee this is the best way to do it of course - but it works for me! 

Assembling the Legions

For this post I am using two boxes of Victrix French Guard, one of Chasseurs and one of Grenadiers. I had put off doing Guard units for some time, but for 1813/14 battles you actually need quite a few of them! In our Waterloo refights last year it turned out that we had many very disciplined French players with no Guard units(!), so we were short of them! Time to rectify this imbalance.

I'm building four units of 24 from these boxes (which will make two units of 36-48 figures for General de Brigade). As I've said in a previous post about painting, I like to paint in batches of about 100. This will leave 12 rank and file and 12 command left over. I'll use the spare command figures for my Perry line infantry great coated figures, and the 12 spare rank and file will likely become skirmishers. 

Below are the tools for assembly. Craft knife and Plastic Sprue Cutter.  Also a little needle file, but that is less important. Also as is described below, Limonene cement is great, though any good plastic glue will do.

The most important thing is to keep the craft knife sharp! If the blade is dull you will make a mess of the figures, and risk the knife slipping and cutting something you don't want cut - like yourself!

Here's the steps I follow. First cut out all the rank and file bodies using the sprue cutter.

All done, about 10 minutes to do 96 of them. The 12 unneeded ones are placed aside.

Next with a craft knife the sprue tags on the bottom of the base are removed so the bases will stand level. Once this is done, I break off the craft knife blade so as to have a fresh edge for the next step.

Now the most time consuming bit. Each body is cleaned up. I just pick one from the pile and start cleaning. Plastic figures generally have a faint mold line down each side of their body. The secret to removing this quickly is to hold the knife at a 90 degree angle to the figure and scrape. Try to avoid 'cutting' away at flash where possible. Filing can be used to smooth any areas where you get a bit vigorous, but try to avoid too much of this.

All done, depending how much effort you put in this will probably take a couple of hours - if like me you are also watching You Tube, getting a coffee, talking to the wife etc, at the same time! Plus these are the Guard so extra care taken this time around! As I do each figure I place it into a group of similar torsos. There are six different rank and file bodies in this group. Two lots are already in march attack. 

And once this stage is done, time for a new craft knife blade again!

Most of the rest I also want to be march attack, so I cut out all the march attack left arms with the sprue cutter and clean them up.

Now onto gluing. Don't use superglue! It sets too fast, is messy, smells, and if you get it on yourself it will glue your fingers together or plastic bits to you. Awful! Instead get a good plastic cement which is what these figures are designed for. Liquid plastic cements in bottles I find better than the tube versions.

The one I use is Limonene Cement from Tamiya. It is made from Citrus fruit extract so it smells like Lemon/Oranges. Won't stink up the house and so it is much nicer to use than other plastic cements! Here's a You Tube review of plastic cements.  The single bottle in the photo below has already been used to assemble over a thousand figures already and it is still half full so great value. The bottle cap has a brush attached and that's what you use to apply the glue.

When gluing, I put a small dab of cement on the place where the two pieces will join, but don't join them immediately, and do this for 4-12 figures at a time. I'm doing eight torsos and 8 march attack arms here. Once you finish the dabbing the glue on the last piece, the first ones will be a bit tacky and ready to hold together well, but you will still have enough time to wiggle it around to fit exactly how you want. If at any time the glue has got too dry you can just apply a little more. If the glue slops in the wrong place, just don't touch that area and it will dry without affecting detail too much.

Here are a few I'm doing at high port position. There's an arm with the musket, and another arm which needs to attach to the musket and opposite shoulder. I put glue on both arms (including the hand that will hold the musket), and both sides of the torso, and then put the whole lot together. Once again, you can wiggle them around until you get them in the right position. Make sure the hand holding the musket is tight against it.

Plastics also allow you to do quick and easy conversions. Here I decide I want the gun in the loading position (figures on left) to be held upright. I cut the hand and gun off at the wrist, and re-glue it into an upright position. Easy.

And here I want a figure waving a pistol in the air. So the hand is cut off, and pistol hand attached in it's place. (Note the pistol and holster I'm using comes from the Victrix French line infantry kit not the guard kit! It's easy to swap pieces around with plastic kits).

And done, I should probably also snip off one of the pistols from the holster, but then again maybe this Guardsman Pistols Pierre is a hero with three pistols...

And all the rank and file done. Most are in march attack posture, but there's some gesturing, waving etc to add interest. 

Lastly command figures, which I'd already completed earlier together with 12 Middle Guard command. Quite a bit of chopping and converting with the officers for these. For example the figure on the far right is the same as that immediately to his left, but I snipped off his left arm and head with the plastic cutters, and added different arms and head. Additionally I replaced the plastic banner poles with brass wire, something I do with a few of my plastics, and definitely with all metals. 

All done and on their bases ready for undercoating. One other detail here is that I make sure troops of the same or similar pose are grouped together for assembly and painting as much as possible (so all the same torsos on a base for instance), as this speeds up both painting and assembly. Each figure is the same as the last until you get to the next batch. This means you get into a quick pattern with where each clean up scrape, or painting stroke should go. Less cognitive load.

As to time to do all this, it probably takes me a good day to prepare 100 figures (whether plastic or metal), but this depends upon the quality of the casts. Quickest would be Murawski Poles which are very clean casts (or at least the ones I got were), and they would take less than half this time. Perry metals have a fair bit more flash and work needed than Murawski so time is similar to these plastics.

So there we go, I hope that is helpful to someone out there! Thanks for reading. And let me know if you have any ideas to speed this up further! :)

Monday, 31 August 2015

Bandua Paint Rack and Paint Table review

Feeling all fired up from shifting house, I decided to improve my painting space, adding a paint rack and painting tray. Here's the new set up.

This was my old way of storing paints, and heaps of other stuff. Not very tidy and hard to find things!!

Having seen a few paint racks on other people's blogs, like this one on Kerry's blog (another New Zealand Napoleonic gamer), I decided to look around for something suitable. Given I have a variety of paints, in different shaped bottles, pots etc, I needed something flexible in what it could hold. I eventually settled on this Artai paint rack from Bandua, who make a range of pieces.

I also got this painting tray/table, as it's nice to be able to lift everything out of the way easily.

These pieces come in wooden parts which you clip together. All went together easily enough.

Here's the paint rack, which also comes with a neat brush holder. I didn't bother using any glue on this and it seems ok.

The paint brush holder hooks into the back of the paint rack, but can also detach and stand separately if you want (see packaging photo above).

And here's the paint tray. I needed to glue the side pieces of this with wood glue, and held the corners with a couple of pieces of tape while it dried.

I'm very happy with these items and should have got them years ago! Good price and it will save a lot of wasted time by having the most frequently used paints and brushes close at hand and easily accessible. The paint table will also be convenient if I'm taking my painting tasks to someone's house for painting sessions.