Thanks for positive reaction to the painted SHQ siege artillerymen from last week. I quite enjoyed the "factory" process of painting up the first lot of gunners for the Siege Train, so was happy to bash on ahead this week and get the rest of them done. It went well enough (though my current favourite brush seems to be moulting), and I got them finished quite quickly.
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Two batteries of howitzers and two of Gribeauval mortars, to add to the siege cannons |
I have to confess to a faint unease about this little project - I'm happy to have made such good progress (eventually), but there is something about it which maybe says something about me which I don't really care for. Online, one sees all sorts of projects which are beautiful, or which make use of rare and glorious figures, or which represent the height of the figure-painter's art for us to relish. This is none of these things - it is just BIG. Having decided to do it, I have gone about it (relentlessly?) and got it finished - it's kind of industrial. Never mind - I guess it's a personal style or something.
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All right then - let's have a look at what's in this box now... |
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...all right, that's the whole lot |
That's the guns ready for the French siege train, then - I may paint a couple of water buckets or ammo chests to make the bases more interesting, and I have some officers and some digging soldiers to paint - all looking quite promising. Another major gap in the Napoleonic siege effort is I still have to obtain some of the special MDF buttresses to enable guns to stand on my Vauban walls - it's in hand - the drawings exist, I just have to meet Michael from Supreme Littleness for a coffee next week and we are back on track.
Good. I'll tidy the brushes away until after Christmas.
Separate Topic - more pottery buildings.
I have obtained a couple more buildings for my ECW town...
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On the right, The Priory, Lavenham, on the left a rather odd church... |
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...it's flat-backed! What in model railway circles I believe we used to call low relief - this is a church to stick in the distance, against the edge of the table. |
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