Last day of the month and only one blog post so far? Better remedy that! As a result, this will be what Stew, of A Terrible Loss of Lead and Wealth fame calls a 'PB&J' post - just a summary of the (all too little) recent hobby activity. Which amounts to a 'mighty' Macedonian Phalanx - at least in DBA terms - and some new recruits to the 7YW garrison, from, ahem, the Garrison. Plus a brief mention of a fantastic game I was lucky to take part in only yesterday.
First, the Macedonians. I finally managed to complete painting Alexander's Macedonian Phalangites for a DBA army, and here they are in their massed ranks - all 16 of them! They will make 4 elements of 4 Pk in DBA, which should pack quite a decent punch.
The ground shakes to the tramp of their feet.. |
Painted to my usual very middling standard of course, though I would claim I am slowly getting a little better, maybe, and they will do fine for me on the table. Simple block painting with a wash of 'light tone' , which did seem to add a little definition to details of armour etc. Three-inch ( 18 feet, to 1:72 scale ) pikes from household brush bristles look suitably impressive, I think. Colour scheme as simple as possible, with the variation in figure poses and dress making sure they are not entirely identical. I was very lucky that my entirely randomly selected 16 figures just about made up four groups each with a similar pose with the pike - I did not give a moment's thought to that potential issue at the start! A little variety is nice, but I suspect that the one formation that really could and should be depicted with identically-posed figures is a Pike Phalanx, which depends crucially on each man conforming to everyone else!
and from a Persian perspective |
Now I just have to finish a couple of Prodromoi light horse, and then get round to an element each of Peltasts, Hoplites, Agrinians and Archers ( 12 foot figures in all ), and I will have a DBA army, Then, of course, on to the Persians to fight them..
just need to finish these.. |
Jumping forward a matter of 2,000 years, we have some new recruits for the Seven Years War, and they are rather interesting. At the Salute show in April I attended the 'blogger meet-up' and was very pleased to meet Rob Young of The Eastern Garrison blog, and it transpired that he is able to supply some newly-cast figures from the vintage Garrison ranges. Now that is a magic name to me, going back to the days of Charles Grant, Donald Featherstone etc and seeing Garrison figures in their books - I particularly remembered the Persians depicted in ( and maybe on the cover of ) Grant's The Ancient War Game. So, who could miss the chance to own some - and nice new castings too? I do fancy replicating those Ancient Persians and Greeks at some point, but for the moment I thought it would be good to reinforce the 7YW armies, and start by putting together a contingent of French Infantry, to go with the splendid 'night-cap' wearing French Dragoons which I have already and have been wanting an excuse to paint up. So recently a deal was struck, money ( a very reasonable amount) changed hands, and I received a batch of 40+ small metal Frenchmen, pictured here ( straight out of the postal package, hence some bent bayonets and a very small amount of mould flash )
Rob has generously 'thrown in' a gun and crew as a bonus, he thinks it's not a very good model, but I think it will do just fine, very nice of him! Many thanks indeed to Rob, I am very pleased with these.
They will be organised in 'units' of 8 figures for the Portable Wargame, which can easily be combined into larger formations ( 16 or 24, say ) for use with other rules.
who let those pikes in at the back? |
I have enough figures to make 5 Portable Wargame units, one of which is of grenadiers. With the dragoons ( and maybe that gun ), this will make a nice little PW force. For a painting scheme, where else to start then the Kronoskaf 7YW website, which has masses of information including uniform and flag details for many, many regiments of all armies. And looking at the French Line Infantry pages there, what could be better than the oldest regiment? So, Picardie it will be, with their very simple white coat and red waistcoat. I particularly like the old regime 'white cross' French infantry standards (yet again, reminders of vintage Charles Grant , Don Featherstone and Young & Lawford books), and Picardie has a simple white cross, red quarters scheme, which even I should be able to paint...
( the above copyright Kronsoskaf - if any objection, I will happily remove )
The chaps will soon be getting a coat of spray primer, and then the painting production line will (slowly) crank up - in parallel with those Greeks and Persians, of course.
Finally, back to the ancients. Yesterday I was lucky enough to be invited to partake of another 'remote' game run by Jon Freitag of Palouse Wargaming Journal, this time using his 28mm collection to re-fight the Battle of Ilipa, 206 BCE between Rome (Scipio) and Carthage (Hasdrubal), using his amended version of Basic Impetus rules. A great time was had by all, and quite a surprising result ensued. I will leave Jon to describe event in his battle report, which should be well worth a read! Just as a teaser, Jon has provided me with a picture he took, of the moment the Roman Legions made contact with (retreating) Carthaginian elephants - with interesting results!
be careful when approaching the rear of an Elephant... |
It was a great game, many thanks to all concerned, and of course mainly to Jon for being such a fine host and umpire!
That's enough from me, I think those Garrison chaps may need a spray of primer next, and a bit of paint on some Macedonians would be good, too. I'll keep posting my progress - meanwhile thanks for reading, if you have got this far, and keep well, everyone.
Ah! Les Francais!
ReplyDeleteSerendipitously, I too am painting French of the SYW - in my case Regiment du Berry off to Canada (originally intended for India they were diverted to North America and "indians" of a different sort).
Your main challenge will be to find a suitable "Gris- Blanc" for their uniforms. Anything from a light grey to ivory will do.
For maximum utility, it's worth pointing out white cuffs and red waistcoat were common; a quick look in Funken shows no less than 10 regiments with that scheme (2 of which were in Louisburg in Canada). What differentiates them are the number and colour of buttons on the cuff and the arrangement and buttons on the coat pocket....
Regiments had 2, 3 or even 4 battalions. The colours were either the regimental pattern (as you show for Picardy) or the colonel's colour of a white cross on white....
Royal regiments had various arrangements of gold fleur-de-lis. Most drummers wore blue, faced red with copious red coat lace with a pattern of white chains....
Gaiters, invariably white with black buttons and strap.
Interestingly, the "Picards" were one of the original "Old Bands" and in the Italian Wars were pikemen......hence it is perfectly appropriate for Alexander's phalanx to appear alongside them!
Nice job on the plastics. The Garrison figures would not be too out of place beside them as they are a small 25mm.
Neil
Thanks Neil, yes I saw your French SYW painting, they look good! Yes, the 'Gris-Blanc' will be interesting, I am thinking that using a grey primer may be a good start...
DeleteGood point about the commonality of the cuffs/waistcoat combination. I suppose I might think of dividing the 4 'fusilier' units between 2 regiments and make the grenadiers a 'combined' unit. Nice point about the pikes!
Indeed I was thinking that Garrison Greeks/Persians should fit OK with the plastics - i do rather hope to expand beyond just DBA-size forces.
Apparently, the fur grenadier cap wasn't that common until later. Grenadiers were distinguished by mustaches!
DeleteThere were the Grenadiers de France in blue faced red and IIRC another corps in white - when several regiments and militia were disbanded, the grenadiers were retained as a separate corps of several battalions....
https://www.kronoskaf.com/syw/index.php?title=Grenadiers_de_France
Neil
thanks Neil, I think I saw that about the caps coming in slightly later, but I think I am going to apply my "wargamer's license" here and assume the commander of the regiment was a bit of an early-adopter. I can't be doing with peering at whether they have moustaches or not, at 'wargame table distance'!
DeleteDavid, your hobby mojo seems to have returned! For a source for French flags, check out David's Not by Appointment blog. He does great work.
ReplyDeleteAs for yesterday's game, I thought it a brilliant contest. Thanks for playing! My version of events is up on my blog.
Thanks Jon, indeed it's good to get a blog post out there again, it's good motivation for painting, gaming etc. I am aware of 'Not By Appointment' and will take a look.
DeleteMany thanks for the game yesterday, that was a bit of an epic, I have seen your report and will comment there - positively, of course!
A positive comment, while appreciated, is not obligatory. I welcome all feedback!
DeleteLooks like some exciting additions to your forces. Seeing your phalangites and that picture of Jon’s Punic Wars chaps (it’s a much better view than I had online last night), has got me thinking again about Ancients.
ReplyDeleteI don’t think I’ve seen pictures of your Bedcap Dragoons though. Hint hint. Nothing says French 18th century armies to me more than those forage caps.
How about making one of your French units Swiss or Irish? Or 1 of Germans?
And congratulations on your win last night! You and Tony handled your wings to perfection.
Chris/Nundanket
Thanks Chris, yes that game was a good booster for my 'leaning in' to Ancients. I decided on 20/25mm really becuase of the possibilities of vintage figures and cheap plastics, but with your 6mm experience you might be well placed to field some nice big phalanxes/legions in that scale..
DeleteI will have to get the French dragoons out soon enough for painting, so I will try to post a picture of them once that gets going. They came as part of the Eric Knowles legacy that got this blog started. Hmmm... Irish/Swiss/Germans all possible..
Indeed, wasn't that a great game last night? Great to be part of it!
It was a great game. Though I'm still traumatised by the sight of my legionaries running after catching a whiff of Tony's elephants rear end! ;-) Cause for a decimation methinks.
DeleteA bit of everything painting, buying, and gaming.
ReplyDeleteThanks Peter, indeed a little of everything, just ticking over . I think that's what Stew meant with his 'PB&J' label.
DeleteAs a regular player of Jon's games, I suspect you may get a turn at being Scipio or Hasdrubal. It's a great game!
Well I like your DBA figures and the painting looks fine to me and works well with your Old School simple green bases:).
ReplyDeleteThank you Steve, yes I like to keep the basing very simple, another little tribute to Grant etc I suppose. I did wonder if these should have more of a sandy colour though, as they march across Persia!
DeleteSome of my Garrison Medieval Scots have been serving me for over 50 years. The Garrison Ancient and Medieval figures have always been my favourites.
ReplyDeleteAnother source of flags for France is the excellent Warflags site (https://www.warflag.com/) , They are a free download and print your own site though donations are welcomed and appreciated. Maybe not the quality of some of the preprinted flags but I've been happily using them for, well, literally decades now.
Thanks Ross, yes I certainly hope to get some of the Garrison Greeks and Persians, if Rob is amenable!
DeleteThanks for the tip, indeed Warflags look like a good option too.
Love the phalanx. I think the painting style has a clean charm to it.
ReplyDeleteThank you Richard, you are too kind! 'Keep it simple' is absolutely my watchword with these, and it seems to suit the HaT figures. The colour scheme came from a great picture in Peter Connolly's book 'The Greek Armies'.
DeleteBit late with this, I know. Anyway, figures on the front cover of The Ancient War Game are Hinchliffe rather than Garrison - I'm lucky enough to have a load of Grant figures including those so: - https://easterngarrison.blogspot.com/2015/02/returning-to-grant.html
ReplyDeleteThanks Rob, that is fascinating and most impressive! From your commentary it looks like perhaps Harry Pearson acquired them from the Grant family and then passed them on to you? ( I loved Harry's book, by the way). However they reached you, that is a brilliant piece of wargaming heritage!
Delete