Friday, 30 January 2026

'Not a Child in the House Washed..' A January Miscellany

Late January already? And not a child in the house washed, as an old friend from Roscommon would say.. Where did January go?  ( I suspect I may have said 'where did December go? in a post last month, too - let's not make a habit of this! ).  There's been quite a lot of  real life, and not a lot of hobby activity since Xmas - 'time and space, dear boy'.  But there's always something to think about and get on with, or think about getting on with,  and no harm in discussing some of that here. 

This raises an interesting question - does this blog simply report hobby progress, or does it drive hobby activity?  Which is a subject I spent some time thinking about, having taken part in a really interesting discussion on Jon Freitag's  Palouse Wargaming Journal  about blogging and commenting, which in turn had been triggered by a thought-provoking post on Norm Smith's Commanders blog ( 'Thinking aloud and a reduction in output', 14th Jan ). I thoroughly recommend all hobby bloggers or potential hobby bloggers to have a look at those posts - I suspect many readers of this blog will have already done so!   I think this current blog post is a case in point; I admit I am blatantly using the 'need' to put something on the blog as a spur to get on with some actual hobby activity, as well as simply showing the wargaming world that I'm still here..  

There has been a (very) little progress. I have finally picked up my paintbrushes again, and made a start on the next batch of 6mm 'Risorgimento'  figures for Italy, 1859 : working on the Austrian Line Infantry of their 2nd Division (2 brigades) and the remainder of  2nd Brigade of 1st Division.  That's a  total of 10 battalions, 240 figures - turns out I can splosh pale blue paint onto trousers, and white onto jackets,  at a rate of about 90 mins each colour for all 240! Next session, black paint  for the shakos. Here's a 'work in progress' picture 


 I think this gives a good idea of the simplicity of the Commission Figurines MDF figures, which suits me very well - there are simply no buttons to try to paint, let alone count, so these chaps will get a very simple jacket/trousers/shako/backpack/musket/flesh paint job, which will do just fine on the gaming table. Bases and flags tend to play a large part at this scale, too. 

At a larger scale, there are of course my vintage 25mm Minifugs  Seven Years War / AWI collection, acquired in the summer, which I've been trying to simply sort out and put in decent boxes. That's going fairly well, we are up to six A4 box files in some sort of logical order : 

 Here are some examples: 

9 units of French 7YW infantry

 
United States, Native Americans and a few British for AWI

 

Russian contingent

 

and Prussians..

 I've also acquired some A4 Magentic Paper and Ferro Sheets, which should allow me to store them more securely in the boxes.  Thinking around this, I suppose I am eventually going to have to go for a wholesale re-basing exercise on these. I had hoped to keep the vintage bases, but some of them are rather heavily and unsubly textured, some are on non-magnetic aluminium bases, and several different base sizes are in evidence. I think that coming up with a simple, standard-sized, plain old-school basing system, and applying it to all the models, should go a long way to improving the overall look of the collection. But of course, that's going to be a large job! 

Aside from 'physical' stuff like painting and sorting figures, there is the 'mental' stuff  - which recently has been  largely confined to reading.  I am a bit of a magazines obsessive ( just as print magazines are probably withering on the vine, of course! ), there's always a pile to be worked through. I must put in a plug for a couple of recent ones: 

 

For anyone interested in 19th Century European military history, you really should be getting The Foreign Correspondent from The Continental Wars Society. Four issues per year, just 20 pages but it's all good stuff, and a subscription is £10 per year  ( only £6 for PDF version ) - a bargain! This current issue includes articles on : 

  •     Lieutenant Colenol Litzelhofen and the Battle of Solferino
  •     The Cyclist Service in the French Army, c. 1900
  •     The Bavarian 'Feldl' machine gun, 1870 
  •     The Battle of Le Bourget, 1870 (which will be the society's game at 'Salute' in April) 
  •     Polish Scythe Men, 1830
  •     The Army of Liechtenstein in the 19th Century 
  •     The Russian capture of Khiva, 1873 
  •     Illustrations of Belgian uniforms, 1830/31 

Mostly short pieces, but all interesting stuff! 

I do rather like the 'think-piece' columns in Wargames, Soldiers and Strategy magazine -  in the recent  issue no. 138,  Richard Clarke of TooFatLardies fame discussed Wargames Shows and how they might move forward, and  Ilan Mitchell-Smith ( is this really the actor from 1983 movie Wierd Science? ) discussed Arthurian wargaming in 'Taking Arthur Literally' - his idea being not to try to game 5th-Century Romano-British conflicts, but to game the later medieval literary versions - 'we can wargame not who Arthur was, but who the late-medieval audience of Arthur imagined him to be'.  I'm not about to start buying models of 13th-Century knights, but it's an interesting thought. 

There's also  another  good article using literature to inspire gaming - 'Going Solo Over Chalkis' by Mark Backhouse takes episodes from Roald Dahl's wartime memoir Going Solo, about his experience flying Hurricanes in Greece, 1941, and makes them into game scenarios. Of course there are many memoirs by fighter pilots, and thus there must be many possible game scenarios waiting to be created.. 

Easily the best 'opinion piece' I've seen recently was in WSS Issue 137 ( 'Rearguard Actions and Fighting Retreats' theme ),  this was by Keith Flint and entitled 'Let's Escape'.  Keith starts with the oft-quoted idea that  a hobby such as wargaming is an 'escape' from your real life, and expands into the nature of hobbies and their benefits, and some possible drawbacks. He covers a lot of ground in two pages - one line that stuck in my mind being 'What's so terrible about your life that you need to escape from it?'.   This very much  ties into the discussion that Norm and Jon started, too - so thanks to Keith, too, for a really stimulating piece. This picture probably won't let you read the article - maybe go and buy the magazine!  

 

And then by pure coincidence, just as I was thinking about his article, yesterday in an Oxfam Bookshop I found Keith Flint's book 'Airborne Armour' -  so buying it seemed a no-brainer!  Not quite my specialist area, but I'm sure it will be interesting - perhaps a fictional airborne armoured landing in Italy may follow someday? 


 And finally, another 'ooh shiny' piece of shopping - sometimes just buying something will scratch the hobby itch, when there's not time for more activity - I was in central Londond, dropped in at 'Orc's Nest' shop,  and came away with this: 

 

Well, one day my Ancient Macedonians, Persians and Indians are bound to expand beyond DBA and Dominion of the Spear, surely?  A semi-impulse purchase ( and I already have Neil Thomas' ancients book, and and Three Ages of Rome, oops ) , but AdlG seem well-liked, and will at the very least be an interesting read - a large chunk of the book is devoted to mulitfarious army lists, which may  well be useful. 

That about sums up what little I've been up to in January - a bit more effort clearly required in February! (must keep Freiburg 1644 in mind..)   I am in the mood to devote some time to my hobby, and there's the Cavalier show next month to look forward too, and hopefully take inspiration from. I think I'd better press on with painting those  Risorgimento armies, for a start, and try to show some progress next time. Until then, keep well (and warm and dry), everyone.