Showing posts with label Clash of Spears. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clash of Spears. Show all posts

Monday, 2 February 2026

From RobH - All Things Greek (165 points)

 My local club has a focus this year of sharing the Saga Age of Magic night with Saga Ages of Hannibal/Alexander. I have been trying to finish some Greeks I purchased in order to play both these books as well as have another faction for Clash of Spears. Since my first posting for this years challenge I have been work on all things Greek, well almost.

1) First up is a 28mm figure of the Goddess Athena. I am not sure of the source of the figure.




2) The second offering are 12 Companian Cavalry. I had another 24 figures of the same pose based to WRG/DBX standards as part of my Ancient Greeks and that was the same fate that awaited them until I started playing SAGA. 



3) I believe that this was the old Aventine Hellenistic/Carthaginian elephant before they made the switch to resin. I finished painting the elephant and howdah early last year when I first received the Greek Warband. However the 4 crewmen have sat around gathering dust. Since I put on the push for the Greeks I went to work on these 4 figures.




4) My final offering this post was a set of ruins I received last year. This is not Greek. Not sure where I ordered them from but they were a filler to help make sense to me for the shipping expense. Hard to quantify the points. Total footprint is roughly 5 inch x 3 inch x 2 inch. One figure include to show scale only.



A set of ruins for Pillage/SAGA.

12 X 25mm Campanian Cavalry @ 10 points each is 120 Points

1 Goddess. Not sure of the points but she towers above the 25mm figures. 7 points

4 x 25mm crewmen @ 5 points each for 20 points.

A set of ruins ??

Total 150?? points

Rob, excellent stuff here. Athena is cool and will be a nice deus ex machina for a magical Saga game. The Companions are quite colourful and should be great on the table. I always liked the idea of war elephants and I love that you've finished the crew. 

The ruins look to me like the equivalent of three 28mm figures and I'll allow 15 points for those. Rounding up we get 165 points for your tally.

Dallas 

Tuesday, 14 March 2023

From SimonG: A Final Flourish - The Temple Mount CE 70 in 28mm (1390 points)

For my final post of this challenge I'm delighted to serve up my big project for the past six months -- a recreation of a slice of the Temple Mount and Antonia Fortress at the time of the Jewish Revolt CE 66-74.


Something's Afoot!


Historic Context

There is still an ongoing archaeological debate as to what exactly the temple mount looked like. Given the ongoing religious and political sensitivity at the site it's not practical to go digging it up so there's still lots of room for alternative theories.  While most representations of the Antonia Fortress see it as some complex multi tower structure there is one theory that it was actually a Roman Military fort linked to the mount itself by two foot bridges -- these bridges are described in some detail by Josephus.



In part because modelling this layout seemed feasible I chose to build a slice of the corner of Antonia and the start of the two bridges as shown in the illustration above. In real life the bridges were about 600' long so at 2' each this either represents appx 20% of the bridge, or it's more of an approximation (lets say a 3-5x scale up). Incidentally I think one could use the exact same layout for a good mass combat game at 12-15mm scale which sounds like a possible future project!


Construction Approach

The base elements of the model are six Panel Systems Craftfoam 24"x24"x4" (600x600x100 for those in Europe!) slabs -- a great material that is easy to work with but does dent easily so treat it carefully. The architectural elements are a mix of Sarissa and Empires at War MDF kits but most have been customised.


Buildings and base before cladding

The specifics to get the required finish included

  • Carving out the rough West side into the panels (across two that stack) and finishing with Geek Gaming Modelling Compound which is a base for scatters and also gives a good rock effect in itself;
  • Building the two walkways from eight Sarissa aqueducts;
  • Cladding all wall surfaces (including into the base panels themselves) with a thin layer of room temperature hardening modelling clay which was rolled for brick or random stone texture;
  • Using the same approach for the walkways themselves and for the ground in the temple section;
  • Making up a simple wall to edge the West side of the temple walkway area with lengths of MDF finished with clay cladding;
  • Tiling the roofs of the Sarissa temple and workshops with card tiles;
  • Carving a stair way into the base and adding scratch built stairs and a re-purposed Empires at War main door;
  • Painting in a wide selection of Wilko matt sample pots with Citadel washes (the main walls are thinned Reikland Flesh Shade which gave a great pinky Petra like effect) and dry brushing;
  • Finishing the interiors and floors of the Temple and Workshops with printed mosaics and printed painted walls;
  • And a good selection of attractive flowers and greenery flocks on the temple section to contrast with the dry/business like fortress.

Two panels stacked and carved

Extra effort to add tiles


Papered temple walls and floor - suitably smoke blackened!

The parts in finished form


The Finished Product

The final piece is a 4' square with two levels of playing surface. This allows for multiple scenarios with either side as aggressor or defender. I'll add some ladders and other siege machinery to allow for scenarios in which the Romans are attacking from their ramp on the top side in the shot below. The scenario set out here has the Jewish revolutionaries attacking from the temple side across the bridges into the Antonia fortress with the Romans rushing to respond.



I still have some more scatter elements to add but in the main part it's pretty much finished (other than a statue and other pieces for the temple interior).



















And the points?

I reckoned points using the standard cube method for all of the 3D elements and then half points for the flat finished surfaces such as the clad walls and rough stoney grass area -- I'm not claiming any points for the large sandy surface of the fortress or for the stone clad ground within the temple bridge area but as every the Minion's verdict is final!

All dimensions in the table below are good old Imperial Inches!




By my calculation I should be good for 284 points which will at last take me to my 1000 point target for the challenge.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


With this last entry I'll bid farewell for this time and want to extend my thanks to our esteemed minion Tamsin and all of the Tuesday crew plus of course as always to the Snow Lord himself and the gracious Lady Sarah!


What mystery awaits?

Next year perhaps I might get to the Temple itself (anyone know of a stock of Roman columns as I'll need loads and loads of those!)



I'm sorry to say this, but your points claim for these hills is woefully inadequate compared to MartinC's recent range of hills. You leave me with no option but to increase the claim based on a guesstimate of the actual volume - I reckon the volume of all the bits you claimed a discount on the surface area of (rather than volume) comes to about 57 cubes. Adding on the 12.5 cubes for the bits you correctly claimed, that gives you 1390 points for this submission.

Tamsin

Sunday, 27 February 2022

From SimonG: Jewish Mounted and Archers in 28mm for Arrakis (90 points)

"Dune, Arrakis, a desert planet" ... an apposite description for first century Judea and we are back with my ongoing Jewish Revolt project with some support for my larger warband -- archers and a smattering of mounted soldiers.





The archers are a mixture of Crusader and Gripping Beast, and the mounted are Crusader. Head swaps and some cloaks are from Anvil then I added bow strings and arrows, strings for tzitzit plus the cloak details such as the flow onto the horse for the mounted figure which were modelled with Milliput.







Stringing bows is one of those modelling activities that gives me the most pleasure. It's almost like problem solving to work out where to take the thread -- It's pretty annoying how impractical and inconsistent designers are in their sculpting. For example I'm not sure that one in ten figures displays any consistency between the length of the draw at full tension and the length of the arrows in the archers quiver -- the former is always so much longer! And don't get me started on resting the arrow inside or outside the bow at the grip!

I really liked the thread of the bow-string on this one

Unfortunately no easy way to thread the string here,
doing two lengths and joining tends to make a mess

LHS is an example of two strings, hand ends up as a blob!


I also discovered that doing resin head swaps on metal figures is a lot harder than on plastics -- there are some quite suspicious (lets say exceptionally hirsute) neck lines among this lot. I will say however that there’s a pleasing lack of fiddly tack on the horses which made painting them a breeze!


Suspiciously hairy chest on this one



Anyway fiddling with thread and necks besides these came out well -- although having tried to make sandals out of brass wire and milliput I'll say that once was enough (the archer with the cloak)



This little group should add another 80 points to my total (six figures at 5 each plus three mounted at 10 and the 20 point bonus for our dodging the worms on Arrakis)






Next up a superhero -- although a real person this time plucked from history and symbolising resistance to imperial might (read into that what you want in light of current events)


___________________________

I always enjoy seeing updates to this project, Simon. It's such a unique and colourful period, easily capturing the imagination. I particularly admire all the extra effort you've taken in customizing these figures in order to make them your own (especially the bowstrings and head swaps). Definitely worth a few bonus points to your total, I think.  Lovely work Simon!

- Curt