This is a bit late on my part - these chaps arrived a few weeks ago, and my efforts to base them up have been somewhat delayed - for one thing, I was busy doing Real Life stuff again, for another [mumbles in embarrassment...], I had carefully ordered up a new batch of 50x45mm bases from Tony Barr at ERM, in advance of the recruitment of extra battalions. Tony sent them off promptly, as ever, but I carefully and thoughtfully stored the package of fresh new MDF biscuits away in a well-thought-out location, forgot where that was, and couldn't find it until a few days ago.
Oh well.
Anyway, here we have the 2nd battalion of the 26eme Ligne, very kindly painted up for me by The Bold Gonsalvo. I'm very pleased with them, and grateful to all three of my recent guest painters who have contributed so handsomely to my Refurb effort. Thank you, gentlemen. It is a privilege and a pleasure to be able to call on reserve troops painted by friends - adds a whole extra dimension to my armies.
Castings are old Les Higgins for the most part, circa 1973 - the mounted officer and the drummer are by Art Miniaturen, the porte-aigle by NapoleoN 20. Pretty much the standard mix for the current Refurb push. These chaps, Bavarian scenery notwithstanding, are destined for Ferey's 3rd Division of the Armee de Portugal, but will be more than capable of serving gallantly in a variety of theatres, of which the Danube campaign is certainly one.
Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Showing posts with label NapoleoN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NapoleoN. Show all posts
Monday, 1 July 2019
Monday, 3 June 2019
A Tale of Two Flags
Yesterday was a flagging day, which means I
was involved in attaching a flag to a new unit. I keep stocks of my
home-printed flags, and fitting them is not complicated, but it does require
some care, because it is very easy to mess it up. And I do mean a mess. Water-based glues and ink-jet printed flags are a potent mixture, especially if you have fingers like elephants' feet.
Thus my stock of flags includes enough
extra copies to allow for the odd failure.
Since I had the flagging kit out anyway,
and since I have now (at long last) produced a correct flag for the Régiment de Prusse (4eme Étranger), I thought I might as well invest in a little drop of creeping
elegance, and replace the flag for that unit. A tale of yesteryear beckons...
The fact that I have a Napoleonic army at
all has a lot to do with the OOB for the Battle of Salamanca, which has always been a central inspiration. I'm not sure
exactly when, but maybe 10 years ago I was tempted by mention of the Regt de Prusse in that OOB - admittedly
only a residue of 80-odd men by 1812 (in Brennier's [Taupin's] 6th Divn), but that was
enough of an excuse to encourage me to paint up a battalion of something
(anything?) to provide a little variety among the otherwise relentless blue and white of the Armée de Portugal.
At this time NapoleoN Miniaturas had released their pack of "Allied
Infantry", which basically represented Confederation troops in Spain during the 1808
period. These chaps are in moderately scruffy campaign dress, with covered
shakos and rolled overalls. I painted them in the dark green of the Foreign
regiments - the Prussians had red facings, silver lace and rank insignia. They
also had, I had read, a non-standard flag - it was 162cm square instead of the
normal 80cm for a French 1804 flag - and it had a spearpoint finial instead of
an eagle. This was all faithfully reproduced in my little battalion.
A couple of asides here.
NapoleoN
Miniaturas are sadly missed nowadays, but their
figures are an odd mixture, ranging in quality from the exquisite to the
downright agricultural. This is probably not unconnected with the fact that
they had two master-makers, one of whom was a very talented sculptor and one of
whom was the owner. Interestingly, a close parallel might be argued to have
existed at Falcata, around the same
time, and maybe even Les Higgins (much earlier). Whatever, the Allied Infantry
set was not one of NapoleoN's best.
In particular, there was an officer on foot, marching, wearing a bicorn with an
oilskin cover - I've seen the same JM Bueno plate as the sculptor obviously
had, but the hat is so blatantly made of a folded newspaper that I omitted this
particular officer from the unit.
The authentically oversized flag I produced
looked - well, daft. I've always been a bit touchy about it. If anyone were
ever to comment on it, I had even memorised the references in Dempsey's Napoleon's Mercenaries so I could
justify it! This is an area where I am a tad fussy. Stupid really, since my
French army includes Les Higgins figures sporting 1806-style queues but wearing
square-lapelled Bardin-type habits, not to mention Garrisons with high gaiters
and the same late-model coat. Many of my British infantry strut happily around
the Peninsula, wearing their Waterloo shakos. My armies are full of howlers,
inconsistencies and known inaccuracies. I gloss over them all, but I do like
the flags to be reasonable.
![]() |
| The infamous Bueno drawing of Confederation troops in Spain, featuring the officer in the newspaper hat |
| With replacement (regulation) flag. Of course, it may be incorrect now. Hmmm. Must give the flag a little curl. Flags which look like hatchets are not cool. |
Yesterday I replaced it. It no longer looks
daft, I think - of course, it may be incorrect. I'll have to worry about that for
a while now...
If I change it back then I promise I won't
mention the fact.
***** Late Edit *****
By special request, for Liverpool Dave, here's another dodgy photo of one of my Confederation battalions. This time these are Badeners (alas the Baden infantry in Spain did not wear the fabby helmet) - the newspaper hat is in evidence on the left end of the second row.
*******************
***** Late Edit *****
By special request, for Liverpool Dave, here's another dodgy photo of one of my Confederation battalions. This time these are Badeners (alas the Baden infantry in Spain did not wear the fabby helmet) - the newspaper hat is in evidence on the left end of the second row.
*******************
Sunday, 2 June 2019
French Refurb - 1/47e arrives
Another finished battalion for the French Refurb project - this time very kindly painted by Lee, for which my sincere thanks and appreciation.
Castings are appropriate Old School Les Higgins, for the most part, with some more modern support. I was more than a little disappointed to find, when they emerged from the stripper, that some of the fusiliers were in fact re-cast copies, but Lee coped with all that. The grenadiers and the drummer are Schilling miniatures, and the colonel, predictably, is by Art Miniaturen. The eagle bearer is an old NapoleoN casting. All a bit of a mish-mash, really, but very welcome. The first battalion of the 47eme Ligne, these chaps will form part of Ferey's Division of the Armee de Portugal, early 1812.
Thanks, Lee.
Second Topic
This morning I re-acquainted myself with a very nostalgic aroma. I sharpened half a dozen old "Beryl" pencils. Wow - the smell of freshly sharpened pencils - instantly transported back to ancient classrooms, old workplace scenarios, even my old sketchbook when I was a kid. Reminds me - do they still have the Cumberland Pencil Museum in Keswick? Haven't been there in years, but it used to be a fun place to visit.
Third Topic
Purely my worthless opinion, of course, but since Mr Trump's forthcoming visit to the UK is in any case not a widely popular event, why does he feel it is appropriate to express his views on our current political situation? Notwithstanding the compulsion to put in a plug for a couple of his pals, would it not be classier and more polite if he just kept his fat lip buttoned?
Castings are appropriate Old School Les Higgins, for the most part, with some more modern support. I was more than a little disappointed to find, when they emerged from the stripper, that some of the fusiliers were in fact re-cast copies, but Lee coped with all that. The grenadiers and the drummer are Schilling miniatures, and the colonel, predictably, is by Art Miniaturen. The eagle bearer is an old NapoleoN casting. All a bit of a mish-mash, really, but very welcome. The first battalion of the 47eme Ligne, these chaps will form part of Ferey's Division of the Armee de Portugal, early 1812.
Thanks, Lee.
Second Topic
This morning I re-acquainted myself with a very nostalgic aroma. I sharpened half a dozen old "Beryl" pencils. Wow - the smell of freshly sharpened pencils - instantly transported back to ancient classrooms, old workplace scenarios, even my old sketchbook when I was a kid. Reminds me - do they still have the Cumberland Pencil Museum in Keswick? Haven't been there in years, but it used to be a fun place to visit.
Third Topic
Purely my worthless opinion, of course, but since Mr Trump's forthcoming visit to the UK is in any case not a widely popular event, why does he feel it is appropriate to express his views on our current political situation? Notwithstanding the compulsion to put in a plug for a couple of his pals, would it not be classier and more polite if he just kept his fat lip buttoned?
Thursday, 18 April 2019
French Refurb Project - The Freitag Battalion
What better use for a new flag than to stick it on a new unit? I am delighted to welcome The Freitag Battalion - much travelled, and very kindly painted by Jonathan - a very big help indeed with shifting the backlog, and excellently done too.
These are the first battalion of the 26eme Ligne, who will form part of Ferey's 3rd Divn of the Armee de Portugal of 1812. For the casting nerds, the rank and file here are Les Higgins figures from the 1970s, all stripped and recycled, and probably very pleased to find they are back on duty. As always with Higgins figures, it's a challenge to find compatible command - the officer in the second row and the porte aigle are Qualiticast, the colonel and the drummer are from Art Miniaturen and the officer at the back is by NapoleoN.
Many thanks to Jon - this is really very much appreciated, and they will make a fine addition to my army.
These are the first battalion of the 26eme Ligne, who will form part of Ferey's 3rd Divn of the Armee de Portugal of 1812. For the casting nerds, the rank and file here are Les Higgins figures from the 1970s, all stripped and recycled, and probably very pleased to find they are back on duty. As always with Higgins figures, it's a challenge to find compatible command - the officer in the second row and the porte aigle are Qualiticast, the colonel and the drummer are from Art Miniaturen and the officer at the back is by NapoleoN.
Many thanks to Jon - this is really very much appreciated, and they will make a fine addition to my army.
Sunday, 11 March 2018
1809 Spaniards - Light Infantry Completed!
This morning I have two new light infantry units ready for action, so I am pleased to note that the original planned four such units are now finished. Another little milestone (as opposed to a millstone, which is a different thing altogether).
These are the Voluntarios de Gerona (yellow facings) and the Cazadores de Barbastro (red). The castings are Falcata, apart from the marching officer and the drummer in Barbastro, which are NapoleoN. The Falcata figures paint up nicely, but the moulds were suffering badly when these chaps were produced, and it took a lot of filing and re-carving to get them into shape.
According to my (expanded) target OOB for the 1809 Spaniards, the only things I still have to paint are 2 battalions of grenadiers, 3 units of line cavalry, 1 of dragoons, 1 foot battery, a few more generals and ADCs and a small group of zapadores (individually based). Apart from elegances like limbers and some garrison artillery that's the lot, so I hope I can finish them this year.
In case they are useful, here are the flags for these units, which I have produced with Paintshop Pro - if you print them at about 20mm high (cut off the green bits!) that's near enough 1/72 scale - I would not recommend them for anything bigger than that. Feel free to use them, but if you share them or publish any pictures, I'd appreciate a mention!
A quick word on Spanish light infantry flags - these units each consisted of a single battalion, which carried the Coronela national flag; if they still had a Sencilla (battalion flag) left over from an earlier regimental organisation, it would be stored away in a church or a depot somewhere. There is a very tattered sencilla for the Barbastro unit still in existence, but by 1809 it was no longer carried on campaign.
| With skirmishers deployed |
| In close order - skirmishers tucked away at the back |
According to my (expanded) target OOB for the 1809 Spaniards, the only things I still have to paint are 2 battalions of grenadiers, 3 units of line cavalry, 1 of dragoons, 1 foot battery, a few more generals and ADCs and a small group of zapadores (individually based). Apart from elegances like limbers and some garrison artillery that's the lot, so I hope I can finish them this year.
| Cazadores de Barbastro |
| Voluntarios de Gerona |
A quick word on Spanish light infantry flags - these units each consisted of a single battalion, which carried the Coronela national flag; if they still had a Sencilla (battalion flag) left over from an earlier regimental organisation, it would be stored away in a church or a depot somewhere. There is a very tattered sencilla for the Barbastro unit still in existence, but by 1809 it was no longer carried on campaign.
Friday, 9 March 2018
A Weakness for Dragoons
This is going to be another of those how-high-can-you-pile-it? posts. Never mind the quality, feel the width.
Five years ago, give or take a day, I published a post celebrating (lamenting?) that I had acquired and refurbished another unit of French dragoons, despite the fact that I already had quite enough.
Well, I've done it again - this time a further two such units. I could claim that, as a Peninsular War devotee, I can never have too many dragoons, or merely confess that I have a long history of having my head turned by a pretty regiment of the blighters. It maybe goes deeper than that.
When I was about 12 (or so) I was lucky enough to be granted a private tour of the Musée de l'Armée (my grandfather was a friend of one of the directors), and one of my most vivid memories of a fascinating but confused Sunday morning is suddenly being confronted by a life-size mannikin of a mounted Napoleonic dragoon, and being dumbstruck (you may well know the actual mannikin I mean - he's still there today, still scaring the kids). It had never occurred to me that soldiers were terrifying individually as well as collectively.
When I started building my Peninsular armies - 10 years or so later - I was enchanted by the PMD/Les Higgins French dragoons. My original quota was a brigade of two regiments, the 6eme (red facings) and the 15eme (pink!). Later I added a third - the 25eme (orange) - but that was it for Les Higgins - they went out of business. In the days before eBay, that was as far as things went - if your manufacturer (or scale!!) went OOP then you were well and truly stuck.
When NapoleoN Miniaturas were active I finally obtained the fourth regiment of the Armée de Portugal's Dragoon Division - the 11eme (crimson) - and then I was happy. Job done.
But then eBay took over, and still the new/old toy soldiers are trickling in. Five years after the last "final" recruits, here are two more. And I'm still pleased with them, and still delighted to have an opportunity to dig out that entire section of the army for a group photo.
Five years ago, give or take a day, I published a post celebrating (lamenting?) that I had acquired and refurbished another unit of French dragoons, despite the fact that I already had quite enough.
| Welcome to the 26eme & 27eme Dragons - you will observe that the trumpeter for the 27eme has not arrived yet - plans are in hand, and he should be present shortly! |
When I was about 12 (or so) I was lucky enough to be granted a private tour of the Musée de l'Armée (my grandfather was a friend of one of the directors), and one of my most vivid memories of a fascinating but confused Sunday morning is suddenly being confronted by a life-size mannikin of a mounted Napoleonic dragoon, and being dumbstruck (you may well know the actual mannikin I mean - he's still there today, still scaring the kids). It had never occurred to me that soldiers were terrifying individually as well as collectively.
When I started building my Peninsular armies - 10 years or so later - I was enchanted by the PMD/Les Higgins French dragoons. My original quota was a brigade of two regiments, the 6eme (red facings) and the 15eme (pink!). Later I added a third - the 25eme (orange) - but that was it for Les Higgins - they went out of business. In the days before eBay, that was as far as things went - if your manufacturer (or scale!!) went OOP then you were well and truly stuck.
When NapoleoN Miniaturas were active I finally obtained the fourth regiment of the Armée de Portugal's Dragoon Division - the 11eme (crimson) - and then I was happy. Job done.
But then eBay took over, and still the new/old toy soldiers are trickling in. Five years after the last "final" recruits, here are two more. And I'm still pleased with them, and still delighted to have an opportunity to dig out that entire section of the army for a group photo.
Friday, 26 January 2018
1809 Spaniards - More Foot Guards
Painted and ready to go in the official box files, here are two battalions of the Guardias Españolas. They will form part of the Reserve Division of my 1809 army.
They've been in the pipeline for a while. Apart from a couple of Falcata interlopers in the command department, these are all OOP NapoleoN castings - the rank and file are a special conversion, with changes to the cuff detail to make them into guardsmen. My thanks to Old John, for duplication of the converted figures. I originally intended to field the units with a random mixture of blue and brown overalls, but for some reason it seemed pleasing for the battalions to be different - another aid to recognition on the battlefield, and also it seems not unreasonable that the Guard should maintain some vestigial extra bits of organisation appropriate to their status. Someone might suggest that the coronela flag for the first battalion should be purple with a pattern of Bourbon fleurs de lis - I'm aware of this flag, and if the unit had been intended for 1746 it would have been a banker choice, but my sources seem to be divided on what they carried in 1809, so I've gone for the majority opinion. If it's wrong they can live with it!
Sunday, 22 October 2017
More French Staff Figures
Just tinkering last night - some retouching, and rebasing to the new house standard. In my OOB, this chap (the one in the very silly hat) is usually Villatte or some such. The casting is Art Miniaturen's figure of Colbert, now discontinued. The regulation ADC (one for a General de Division) is a NapoleoN figure - for a while he had sky-blue overalls, which eventually I decided was a fashion statement too far, so I've toned him down a bit.
| The General may be shouting, "Come on, chaps - for France and Glory!", or he may be saying, "...no, I believe they are still chasing us..." |
Monday, 28 August 2017
Major Checkpoint
Time to have my yearly Sensible Look at
what is on my list of projects - things that have been going on for a while,
things which have crept in through a side entrance or otherwise jumped the queue
(including Creeping Elegance items),
and things that I want to start on, and which need a proper plan - or at least
a better idea of what's involved.
A sanity check, in fact (or charity snack,
as Cousin Dave would have put it) - always worthwhile, always throws up a few
surprises and decision points, and sometimes gives an opportunity to start
something fresh.
This morning's head-scratching produced the
following:
Gaming (generally, like) -
Must make time to do
some more ECW stuff, must set about organising another campaign (probably
boardgame-based in the strategic department), and must do some more work on
developing my in-house tweaked variants on C&CN, to allow for extreme ends
of the action scale - i.e. smaller and larger than normal. For small actions,
I'd like to develop my tactically-enhanced C&C package, in which units have
a front and a formation, skirmishing appears in a more explicit form and there
is even (perish the thought) a simple unit "quality" test to permit
reactive changes of formation. For very large actions, I must have a proper
look at C&CN Expansion #6, which deals with EPIC and similar multi-player
games (all the more pressing because of the very welcome increase in the social
side of my wargaming, in collaboration with Stryker and Goya); I must also do
some more work on my Grand Tactical variant of C&CN, in which units are
brigades, and weapon ranges and implied groundscale are halved (roughly).
One hefty byproduct of
this is that I should also give serious thought to replacing my current
battleboards with posh new ones in 18mm MDF - probably in a slightly larger
size, and with the number of panels increased to allow games up to full EPIC or
La Grande size C&CN. Daunting but probably worthwhile - however much work
may have gone into repainting them, my present boards date back to 1972 or so,
they are horrible (fragile) ½-inch chipboard, and life has not always been kind to them.
Organising
and Painting Armies -
ECW -
my armies are probably big enough, but because I bought in and retouched a load
of pre-owned figures for Montrose's campaigns there is a proportion which is
pretty scruffy - I mean scruffy enough for me to want to do something about it.
This means getting in specific replacements for some dubious looking Scottish pikemen,
and it probably means that I should get rid of a pile of spare lead which is
not going to get painted. Hmmm. OK.
Peninsular War -
All Armies -
I'd like to continue to progress my plan to change grouping and basing of
generals and staff figures. Nice to do, but no rush.
French Army -
I have enough figures for another Division for the Armée de Portugal - probably Bonet's - which will need to be
painted and based. I'd like to get on with this, but it's not critical -
nothing else depends on it. This is a conscious addition to the Grand Plan.
There are some sappers and engineers to paint for siege activities.
| This is the makings of the HLI - some fettling and puttying needed... |
Anglo-Portuguese - I
have the 71st Foot (HLI) on the bottletops to be painted. This may require me
to add some more infantry units to make up a brigade to go with them. I'm
thinking about this - I have stove-pipe figures which could become (for
example) 50th Foot, and I'm sort of thinking about adding the 92nd Gordon
Highlanders (don't have figures for these yet). I have a brigade of nice Portuguese
infantry figures (4 line battalions and 1 of caçadores) from Hagen which need
to be assembled (a bit) and painted, to fill a long overdue vacancy in the
Seventh Divn. I also have some new Portuguese staff figures, which are
interesting, and Hagen have also produced some splendid Portuguese cavalry -
they haven't produced the command figures for these yet, but when they do I
will be forced to replace my existing Portuguese cavalry (which are paint
conversions based on Dutch-Belgian cuirassiers, as I recall).
1812 Spaniards - a couple more infantry battalions to paint up - nothing urgent.
1809 Spaniards -
well now - I worked so hard to collect suitable castings that I now have far too
many. This is tricky - it is very easy just to keep adding units to the OOB, but
I need to stop this, and probably unload excess figures. I have two big Really Useful Boxes full of unpainted
Spaniards, and they weigh a ton - probably a bit silly.
| Form an orderly queue - Spanish grenadiers, and odd staff |
I still have to finish off a battalion of grenadiers, and
I'm also in conversation with Peter Bateman about replacing one of my hussar
regts with a unit of converted Hinton-Hunts, which will be nearer the heart's
desire.
Apart from that, from the existing lead heap, I have to paint
up
- 1 further bn of converged grenadiers (Falcata)
- 2 bns of light infantry (mostly Falcata)
- 2 bns of Foot Guards (specially converted castings)
- 3 regts of Line Cavalry (Hagen)
- 1 regt of dragoons (Hagen)
- a group of infantry pioneers (Falcata)
- some more staff (NapoleoN, Falcata, home conversions)
- 1 more foot battery (mostly Hagen)
...and that's about it. Then I can get rid of the surplus
figures, but this is going to hurt!
Something New - a Napoleonic Bavarian Army!
I've been looking at
figure samples and swotting up on uniforms and OOBs. My intention is to aim at
(as a first stage, anyway) a division of Lefebvre's VII Corps of 1809 - they
can fight on the Danube and also against Andreas Hofer in the Tyrol
(eventually, pending suitable figures - a campaign for which I have a strange
fondness).
Thus my first effort
will involve 8 line bns, 2 of jaegers, 2 or 3 regts of cavalry, 2 batteries and
a few generals. I already have some figures - Ian very, very kindly sent me
some surplus Hinton Hunts, with which I am delighted, and I'm working on building
up a suitable stockpile. SHQ are suitable, there are some Hagen figures which
look good (haven't got physical samples yet - as ever, size is everything). The
Hintons are very nice - I like them - only slight problem with Hintons is that Uncle Marcus made all the Bavarian infantry with plumed helmets, which is only correct for
grenadiers, so I would feel obliged to convert (and clone) deplumed fusiliers
in goodish numbers. Art Miniaturen are a good source as well, but they are
pricey and sometimes their figures are a little delicate for wargaming.
Anyway - early days,
but I'm quite excited about this.
So much for sanity - have I decided what
priority order these projects will jostle each other into? Well - nearly...
Better have a good rest, to gather my
strength.
Labels:
Bavaria,
Conversions,
Falcata,
France,
Hagen,
Hinton Hunt,
Kennington,
NapoleoN,
Painting,
Spain
Tuesday, 15 August 2017
Elegance Creeps On - a little progress
Finally got the current batch of ADCs finished and based up. There is a bit of a risk with jobs which hang around - after a certain time (how long this is must vary from individual to individual, I guess) I sort of get used to the idea that they are not finished yet, and they can go into a state of limbo.
A bit of background here - my Armée de Portugal is based on Salamanca, and is represented by 3 overstrength infantry divisions (the real army had 8 understrength ones) - the cavalry allocation keeps the full establishment of 2 divisions, which suggests an over-provision of cavalry, but my cavalry are a bit weaker than the historic original.
I am unsure what to do with the cavalry division commanders - for this army, both divisions were headed up by a general de brigade, and in each case the gaffer was an ex-staff man, with no obvious cavalry background or affiliation. Accordingly, Messrs Boyer and Curto appear on my table in rather boring regulation dress - a bit lame for supposed sabreurs. I would prefer it if I had some rather more flamboyant figures to deploy - I'm working on it - but I suspect that they were not particularly interesting individuals. Pierre Boyer gained the nickname "Pierre the Cruel" because of his harsh treatment of guerrillas, and there is a nifty portrait sketch of him, with fancy braided jacket and whiskers. However, I would guess from the style of his goatee beard that this is a later picture, from his time in Algeria, where he maintained his reputation for shooting and torturing, probably generating more unrest than he cured.
Beyond that my French army continues with another force, which is a rather vague amalgam of the Armies of Catalonia, Centre and Midi - it's chief role is to fight the partidas, and give a place in the organisation to the more colourful Confederation and Italian troops, and King Joseph's own fine chaps (poor sods). I'll get to their generals shortly.
In the meantime, things are going well.
| The replacement figure for Marshal Marmont [Art Miniaturen - henceforward AM] with his aides, who are both from Hagen |
| ...and they leave as elegantly as they arrive |
| MS Foy [OOP NapoleoN casting] with his ADC [AM] |
| Bertrand Clauzel with ADC [both AM] |
A bit of background here - my Armée de Portugal is based on Salamanca, and is represented by 3 overstrength infantry divisions (the real army had 8 understrength ones) - the cavalry allocation keeps the full establishment of 2 divisions, which suggests an over-provision of cavalry, but my cavalry are a bit weaker than the historic original.
I am unsure what to do with the cavalry division commanders - for this army, both divisions were headed up by a general de brigade, and in each case the gaffer was an ex-staff man, with no obvious cavalry background or affiliation. Accordingly, Messrs Boyer and Curto appear on my table in rather boring regulation dress - a bit lame for supposed sabreurs. I would prefer it if I had some rather more flamboyant figures to deploy - I'm working on it - but I suspect that they were not particularly interesting individuals. Pierre Boyer gained the nickname "Pierre the Cruel" because of his harsh treatment of guerrillas, and there is a nifty portrait sketch of him, with fancy braided jacket and whiskers. However, I would guess from the style of his goatee beard that this is a later picture, from his time in Algeria, where he maintained his reputation for shooting and torturing, probably generating more unrest than he cured.
Beyond that my French army continues with another force, which is a rather vague amalgam of the Armies of Catalonia, Centre and Midi - it's chief role is to fight the partidas, and give a place in the organisation to the more colourful Confederation and Italian troops, and King Joseph's own fine chaps (poor sods). I'll get to their generals shortly.
In the meantime, things are going well.
Saturday, 7 January 2017
1809 Spaniards - Flagging Effort?
Today I have attached flags to the 5 recent new(ish) battalions of my 1809 Spanish army which were waiting for them. Another small step for mankind - pleased with them, actually.
From left, front row: 1/Cantabria; 1 & 2/Ordenes Militares, all marching into the customary stiff breeze
Back row: 1 & 2/La Corona.
All the rank and file are NapoleoN figures, while the command are a mixture of NapoleoN and Falcata, with a few conversions thrown in.
Good - they are now safely put away in the boxes, ready to fight. I feel an urge to set up a more complete group picture of the state of the Spanish army in the near future. I'll do this.
As for the next painting batches, I am giving some thought to doing two battalions of the Guardias Reales. This will probably break down into two batches - a fussy one with all the command, and then a factory one for the rank and file. This will be the second guard presence in the Reserve Division - I already have the Guardias Walones - the uniform is very similar, but the Reales will be rather scruffier, partly because I shall be the painting service (!) and partly because they will be in blue overalls rather than those dashing high gaiters.
From left, front row: 1/Cantabria; 1 & 2/Ordenes Militares, all marching into the customary stiff breeze
Back row: 1 & 2/La Corona.
All the rank and file are NapoleoN figures, while the command are a mixture of NapoleoN and Falcata, with a few conversions thrown in.
Good - they are now safely put away in the boxes, ready to fight. I feel an urge to set up a more complete group picture of the state of the Spanish army in the near future. I'll do this.
Saturday, 15 October 2016
1809 Spaniards – Regimiento de La Coroña – got there eventually
| The Mojo Breakers - painted at last - just waiting for flags. Mostly NapoleoN figures - some Falcata and some conversions in the command |
I checked some dates – I painted up some
test figures for a couple of regiments, including this one, in September last
year. At that time (unusually for me) I had been progressing well with figure
painting, and my Spanish army was coming along nicely, but it was becoming
obvious that I would have to cope with increased exposure to Real Life for a
while, so I was attempting to plan what to do next. What I did next was to
paint up the command figures for two 2-battalion regiments (pics appeared
here in Oct ’15), and ship off the massed fusileros to a painting service I’ve
used before.
As I’ve mentioned in the past, my philosophy
with these paint shops is that they do a so-so job, requiring a fair amount of
correction and retouching, but if they are cheap enough then the time saved is
worth the cost – even comprehensive retouching is invariably quicker and easier
than painting from scratch.
Well, maybe not invariably. In this case, I
sent the figures away with uniform artwork and a couple of painted samples,
which is the normally the best way of ensuring an effective job. They were a long time at the painting service, and I started to get worried when the customary
progress photos did not come back by email. When I chased the batch up, they
simply returned them, painted to what I regarded as a very disappointing
standard, and with a few breakages to add insult. One of the regiments was a fairly
straightforward job to sort out, and they duly took their place in the line
(well, the box file) within a week or so. The other – 2 battalions of La Coroña
– was just a mess. I started tinkering around, to find matches for the paint
shades, and to work out how much effort was needed to sort out the facings and
piping. To be quite honest, it would have taken me a couple of weeks of
evenings to make a really nice job of them, but instead I went into a major
sulk. La Coroña are my only Spanish
regiment to wear the older 1802 regulation uniform (which is very smart, though
a bastard to paint), and I was upset out of all sensible proportion that they
had gone so wrong.
My last emails to the painter, expressing
my disappointment, are dated the end of November last year, when I put the figures
away in a plastic box – all mounted on the official painting bottletops and
everything – and left them to fester for a while. A week or so later, my mother
was admitted to hospital for the first of a series of episodes which has severely
limited my hobby time. We got a reprieve from March to August, but otherwise
this has not been a good year for a lot of reasons, and figure painting is well
down the list of priorities that didn’t make progress this year.
So – no hard luck stories – I simply got
timed out on the Coroña boys, and they have sat like an itching sore in the
plastic box for best part of a year. I could have done much better, but I managed to find more pressing things to do and – I have to admit it – my spirit was rather
damaged by the episode with the painter. One thing for sure, this is the last
time I learn that particular lesson…
Time passed. I was pleased with the things
I did with ECW sieges, but the Spanish infantry stayed very definitely in the
Sulk Box – I felt worse and worse about them. My mum has now been back in
hospital for a month and – paradoxically – this has helped, since it has broken
my spare time down into definite times and fairly short sessions. Almost out of
spite, I dug out La Coroña, and over a week or so I have finally got them
finished to a standard that I am happy with. It was fiddly, and it took a lot
of coffee and Chopin and Stan Getz and Bill Evans and the Yellowjackets to get
the job done, but it’s done.
Yes!
| 2nd Battalion |
They do not have their flags yet – I
believe I have already printed the flags, so they will be in the folder
somewhere. I’m not worried about that for the moment – the main point is that I have defeated
the mojo-breakers. I’m back on track, and am feeling a lot better about
painting.
I have plenty more Spaniards to paint - I
also have a couple of units farmed out to friends who have kindly offered to do
some painting for me, so I expect to make better progress now – even if things
crop up to delay me, I know I can get the job done when I am ready. These
things are important, it seems.
I was going to put up a short list of
things which I have to paint next, but when I started thinking about it I found
my enthusiasm starting to waver, so I’ll just stack the plastic boxes in order,
and work through them. Stand by with the coffee and the CDs.
In passing, my thanks to Stryker for
invaluable guidance on paints, and on the technique for painting buttons with a
cocktail stick (a potential sanity-saver), and to Arlen de Vries for spiritual
support and occasional Dutch jokes.
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
1809 Spaniards - Some Welcome Progress
After charging ahead with my 1809 Spanish Army for a while, everything screeched to a halt in November - to a large extent this was simply because an illness in the family left me with very little spare time, but it was also a consequence of what I am now rather ashamed to refer to as The Great Sulk - of which I shall say more later.
Today I am delighted to welcome the first newly painted Spanish unit of the year - this is the 3rd of what will be 4 Foot Artillery batteries suitable for 1809. These were excellently painted by my rather shadowy friend Francisco Goya (does he paint in a mask? - hmmm), and they are not only a valuable addition to the available forces, but also (I hope) an important step towards ending the Sulk.
The figures are mostly by GB Miniatures, one of the Hagen family of 1/72 makers (mastered by the estimable Massimo), with a couple of NapoleoN boys and one Falcata. The guns are Hagen's own.
One slightly tricky aspect of putting together a gun-crew is the combination of poses - I try to make this sensible, but manufacturers are very enthusiastic about having the rammers ramming, the firers firing etc - everybody depicted doing what it is he does - but having them all do it at the same time would upset the Health & Safety boys more than a little. I'm not too fussy about this - I have enough artillery crews of old Minifigs and similar which made a point of having the rammer portrayed making an attempt to have his arms blown off, so getting snippy about it at this stage would be rather silly. I do try to keep an eye on things, though.
The Sulk.
Ah, well. You see, last year I suddenly found myself in the position where I was going to have to go back to doing all my own painting, and this after a period when I had been using the services of painters who were both quicker and far more skilful than I. I decided the only thing to do was to bite the bullet and crack on, by myself, so as not to lose momentum (momentum, at my age, being a precious thing).
I did pretty well, painting away, good-style, and listening to a lot of Fauré, but I was obviously going to need more outside support in the painting department. I renewed my acquaintance with Philgreg, the painting service based in Sri Lanka.
I had previous with Philgreg - I had found that they produced an acceptable result (unbelievably cheaply, even allowing for postage costs) if I provided an exact painted sample of what I wanted - I would get back pretty good facsimiles of what I sent them. The occasions when things went a bit wonky were when I required them to work from verbal descriptions, or - I suspect - when they were unusually busy, when an observable dip in quality suggested to me that some of the painting crew were less experienced, or fringe players in a team pool. My first attempts to get Philgreg involved again last year went pretty well - I required them only to provide rank-and-file, in fairly simple uniforms, and the amount of rework I had to do to get the finished figures to a decent quality was acceptable - the cost of the outsource work was good for the effort saved. If they produced 85%-finished figures, it was worth the money.
Their approach is businesslike, and the main man (Philip) is helpful and easy to deal with. The idea is that they send you photos of samples, to show you how your shipment is progressing, to make sure you are happy. Apart from a rather high proportion of broken figures, this went OK - for the first such shipment. Then - lulled into a foolish over-confidence - I sent a rather more complicated job.
First ominous sign was I got no sample pictures, and got no progress report at all until I chased them. The figures arrived back, painted, and they weren't good. One battalion took me about a week of evenings to rescue, but it turned out well. The other battalion that came back was worse. In all honesty, they aren't really so bad - I reckon that another week of fairly dedicated evenings would put them into very good shape indeed, but somehow I haven't been able to bring myself to do it. I have been more depressed by this (relatively minor) reverse than I should have been - I have put the figures, on their bottletops, carefully in a box, ready to start work, and then I have hidden in a hole in the ground. I have found Other Things to Do. Sulking. Lamentable behaviour.
With this new artillery unit I hope I can get myself motivated again - a good slap around the head, a cup of decent coffee, some appropriate painting music on the old Bose and I should be back in business. There you are - I've said it on the blog - I'm duty bound to shape up now.
Today I am delighted to welcome the first newly painted Spanish unit of the year - this is the 3rd of what will be 4 Foot Artillery batteries suitable for 1809. These were excellently painted by my rather shadowy friend Francisco Goya (does he paint in a mask? - hmmm), and they are not only a valuable addition to the available forces, but also (I hope) an important step towards ending the Sulk.
The figures are mostly by GB Miniatures, one of the Hagen family of 1/72 makers (mastered by the estimable Massimo), with a couple of NapoleoN boys and one Falcata. The guns are Hagen's own.
One slightly tricky aspect of putting together a gun-crew is the combination of poses - I try to make this sensible, but manufacturers are very enthusiastic about having the rammers ramming, the firers firing etc - everybody depicted doing what it is he does - but having them all do it at the same time would upset the Health & Safety boys more than a little. I'm not too fussy about this - I have enough artillery crews of old Minifigs and similar which made a point of having the rammer portrayed making an attempt to have his arms blown off, so getting snippy about it at this stage would be rather silly. I do try to keep an eye on things, though.
The Sulk.
Ah, well. You see, last year I suddenly found myself in the position where I was going to have to go back to doing all my own painting, and this after a period when I had been using the services of painters who were both quicker and far more skilful than I. I decided the only thing to do was to bite the bullet and crack on, by myself, so as not to lose momentum (momentum, at my age, being a precious thing).
I did pretty well, painting away, good-style, and listening to a lot of Fauré, but I was obviously going to need more outside support in the painting department. I renewed my acquaintance with Philgreg, the painting service based in Sri Lanka.
I had previous with Philgreg - I had found that they produced an acceptable result (unbelievably cheaply, even allowing for postage costs) if I provided an exact painted sample of what I wanted - I would get back pretty good facsimiles of what I sent them. The occasions when things went a bit wonky were when I required them to work from verbal descriptions, or - I suspect - when they were unusually busy, when an observable dip in quality suggested to me that some of the painting crew were less experienced, or fringe players in a team pool. My first attempts to get Philgreg involved again last year went pretty well - I required them only to provide rank-and-file, in fairly simple uniforms, and the amount of rework I had to do to get the finished figures to a decent quality was acceptable - the cost of the outsource work was good for the effort saved. If they produced 85%-finished figures, it was worth the money.
Their approach is businesslike, and the main man (Philip) is helpful and easy to deal with. The idea is that they send you photos of samples, to show you how your shipment is progressing, to make sure you are happy. Apart from a rather high proportion of broken figures, this went OK - for the first such shipment. Then - lulled into a foolish over-confidence - I sent a rather more complicated job.
First ominous sign was I got no sample pictures, and got no progress report at all until I chased them. The figures arrived back, painted, and they weren't good. One battalion took me about a week of evenings to rescue, but it turned out well. The other battalion that came back was worse. In all honesty, they aren't really so bad - I reckon that another week of fairly dedicated evenings would put them into very good shape indeed, but somehow I haven't been able to bring myself to do it. I have been more depressed by this (relatively minor) reverse than I should have been - I have put the figures, on their bottletops, carefully in a box, ready to start work, and then I have hidden in a hole in the ground. I have found Other Things to Do. Sulking. Lamentable behaviour.
With this new artillery unit I hope I can get myself motivated again - a good slap around the head, a cup of decent coffee, some appropriate painting music on the old Bose and I should be back in business. There you are - I've said it on the blog - I'm duty bound to shape up now.
Monday, 23 May 2016
Sieges - French 24pdr
Thanks very much for the various suggestions received for siege gun castings. Special thanks to Mr S Wargamer, of Hampshire, who drew to my attention item MALA3 in the current Miniature Figurines 25mm catalogue - officially described as a Marlburian siege gun.
So I imported one to try it out. It looks as close to a 24pdr Vallière system gun, such as would have been used by the French in the Peninsula, as I think I'm going to get without having something specially made. The wheels are 21.5mm diameter, which is correct for 1/72 scale - I included some spare NapoleoN gunners to give the idea. Looks pretty good, I think? The Vallière guns were some 75 years out of date by the Napoleonic wars, but the big siege bangers were well down the queue for modernisation - the Gribeauval principles of light weight and standardised parts didn't really suit the heaviest stuff. Which means, I guess, that this gun could take part in a siege at any time from about 1690 to 1830, for any number of nations - a coat of dirty olive green paint and no-one will know the difference. Once I have it painted, I'll photograph it next to one of the British iron siege guns, for comparison - but don't hold your breath.
I have to say that the gun was fiddly to assemble - casting was not brilliant, so a lot of cleaning up of the pieces was needed, and supergluing the little plates to attach the trunnions is exciting - do not sneeze. Mission accomplished, anyway, so if a klutz like me can manage it, it must be plain sailing.
I'll have a look at this for a few days - if I still like it, I'll order up another seven of the things - that's enough for 4 batteries, and I'll start looking around for howitzers and mortars to suit - better read up on my pdf copy of Belmas to check what they had in the train. I'll also need more gunners - I have some spares, but not enough. I am a little shaken to see that the Art Miniaturen range seems to have been cut down a bit - at least it looks that way on the new website - so I may be looking at multiple sets of the cheap-and-cheerful Kennington gunners to make up the crews.
And yes - thank you - I do realise that the silly little rammer/sponge is not going to serve that monster very well, so less of the vulgar humour, if you don't mind...
Saturday, 5 December 2015
1809 Spaniards - Regimiento de Ordenes Militares
| Regto de Ordenes Militares - the flags are in the pipeline (or maybe the pipes are in the flagline - I forget) |
The command figures have been waiting for a couple of weeks for the rest of the boys to arrive, so here they are together at last - the colonel with the huge nose is in evidence in the back row. There is another two-battalion regiment nearing completion - in the next week or so, I hope.
Things are really shaping up nicely now - to meet my original planned OOB (based upon a subset of the forces at Ucles in 1809), I am now just short of another 3 battalions of light infantry, 3 of grenadiers, 2 of foot guards, 4 regiments of medium cavalry (dragoons and line cavalry), 1 (possibly 2) more foot battery(ies) and a small force of sappers and workmen. I have all the figures I need. I also need maybe another 4 or 5 brigade commanders and odd personalities, and I am discussing the possible purchase of a converted unit of lancers in top hats.
When added to the section of the "1812" army which is suitable for both periods (basically the volunteer and other "new" regiments raised after 1808 - mostly in round hats - and the irregulars), the 1809 army is going to be very hefty indeed. Maybe even big enough to outnumber the French by a sufficient margin to stand a chance of beating them.
I'll post a proper set of OOBs for the 2 armies, once I've worked it out more completely, and once I think of a good way to present them.
Other topics...
(1) Following on from my previous post, I regret to report that there was a big shooting party on the farm here yesterday morning - the timing possibly influenced by the dodgy weather outlook for the coming weeks. Algernon the pheasant has not been seen since, and yesterday afternoon there was a new cock pheasant in our garden, so I fear the worst.
Late edit ---- Algernon has been seen today, hiding from the gales in our front garden, so rumours of his demise were incorrect. There is a dead hen pheasant outside our French window, though - the Forensic Dept have been called - a spokesman [me] said that fowl play is suspected [see what I did there?].
(2) You may have seen in the UK news that the Forth Road Bridge, which connects Edinburgh with Fife (and therefore with the major cities of Perth, Dundee, Aberdeen, Inverness etc) is closed for emergency structural repairs until after the New Year. Since the bridge carries some 70,000 vehicles a day, this is a major disruption; it carries a great deal of commuter traffic, so at the moment I'm not sure how things are going to work out. The first stage of the disaster involved closing one carriageway, which resulted in 2 to 3 hour delays in traffic queues. Now the bridge is completely closed, which means the Fife/Edinburgh traffic will have to detour via Kincardine Bridge (20 miles upstream) or people will have to get the train. [From a completely selfish point of view, I was also struck yesterday by the thought that Amazon's main Scottish depot and warehouse is at Glenrothes, which is on the north side of the Forth, which could be a major problem for my Christmas shopping...].
If you were unaware of this local problem with our bridge, I am confident you would have read of little else if the bloody thing had collapsed during the rush hour.
The good news is that the bridge boys are on the way with the gaffer tape supplies...
Saturday, 24 October 2015
1809 Spaniards - Command Figures for Regimiento "Ordenes Militares"
Another little group of command figures emerges, blinking, into the bright lights. This is an example of the classic 1805 regulation uniform. Ordenes Militares were the 31st line regiment of the Spanish army; like Navarra (24th), America (26th) and Jaen (30th) they had dark blue facings, but the configuration of white lapels, blue collars and white metal buttons identifies them uniquely. I'll get their flags printed up during this next week.
| You know what they say about men with big noses? - that's right, the Colonel of the 31st can smell the enemy miles away. This is a Falcata casting. He is wearing his sash of the Order of Sant Iago. |
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