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.
 |
| As originally recruited, with big flag. Both the photos in this post look a bit washed-out - the reds are proper reds in real life. The figures are from the NapoleoN "Allied Infantry" set, with the mounted and foot officers from Kennington - the foot officer at the end of the 2nd rank was drafted in to replace the man with the newspaper hat. |
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 |
One trend in wargame armies which I have
not approved of over the last couple of decades has been caricaturisation (if
there is such a word). Beautifully- painted 28mm figures with grotesque faces,
huge hands, outsize heads, giant muskets - OK - that's all down to the
sculptors; there has also been a move to crazily-oversized flags. The
French flag of 1804, let us remember, was 80cm square. If your French army has
lovely flags which are 6 feet square in scale then that is your taste and your
choice - no problem - but to me that looks daft. Thus my big Regt de Prusse flag, authentic or not, has troubled me.
 |
| 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.
*******************