Saturday, December 19, 2020

A splash of colour

Having been immersed in feldgrau, horizon bleu and mud for the past two weeks or so, it is time to go for a bit more colour.

Back to working on Napoleonic figures, but also some for the Great Turkish War (and such).

A bit of white for the shirt cuffs and cravats and these fellows will be ready for black washing, basing and the final touches. I will hopefully be back with the finished items before too long, along with a related book review.

10 comments:

  1. A nice mix of stuff there James. I know that after painting lots of British uniforms for WWII, I hankered after colourful units to paint, even though the former were somewhat quicker!

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    1. Thanks Steve. It's funny, I expected the First World War figures to be easy to paint, but found them quite a challenge, particularly the Germans with all that kit in different shades of brown. It was a bit to do with familiarity too. I enjoyed painting them though. Just as well as there are more that I want to do.

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  2. The search for the perfect color has something to do with alchemy, I suppose... a way to keep on searching, endlessly :)

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    1. The 'perfect colour' can send you mad, can't it? I like to play with mixing colours, washing and highlighting, but am happy to accept that the true colour ranges greatly due to weather, dyes and wear and tear!

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  3. That is a mean looking cheval de frise on your painting bench.

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    1. That's keen-eyed of you Peter! I thought it would be right, but it was (and is still) out of scale. It is there for redoing...

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  4. Great Turkish War, hmmm...sounds and looks very interesting.

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    1. You may well know it as the Holy League? From the siege of Vienna in 1683 (often said to be formed after that) until the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699. I 'came to it' from an expanding interest in 'things Ottoman' from initially focussing on Napoleonic and Great Northern Wars. I have expanded it forwards and backwards to include Austro-Turkish War (1663–1664), Polish-Tartar War (1666–1671), Polish-Ottoman War (1672–1676), Russo-Ottoman War of 1710–11, Austro-Turkish War (1716–1718). Largely the same Ottomans can be used across all of these; certainly within the definition of 'practical wargaming'!

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  5. Great looking figures for a period of military history I know literally nothing about James - I look forward to being educated via your progress with this project!

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    1. Gosh Keith, it could be the blind leading the blind then!

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