Archive for September, 2008

British Square – but some problems

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Towards the middle of the British infantry square I planned to have at least 2 mounted senior officers plus a couple of dragoons.

The two senior officers are now complete, and the number of figures ready to be put into the British Square is slowly increasing!

I had already undercoated the next 10 infantry figures ready for painting. But the undercoat has lifted from 5 of them. The reason for this undercoat coming off in patches is not clear to me. All of those 10 figures were degreased at the same time as the horses and other figures on this page. The only thing the 10 infantry have in common is that I used a new white undercoat bought from a “Pound Shop” (a very cheap shop). Maybe this cheaper undercoat aerosol is not so flexible as the one I normally use. So I am now going to have to remove all the white undercoat and then respray with my nomal grey undercoat that I have been using for many years.

British Square – the painting starts

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

I have made a start on some of the figures which will make up the command stand and also one of the officers behind one of the faces of the British Square.

These are 1/72 plastic figures and I find the techniques for painting and preparing plastic model figures very different from working with metal military figures.  The plastic figures had a lot of mould lines and pieces of flash which needed removing. Sandpaper left a rough surface and I found the best tool to use was a razor sharp blade.

Also the quality was not nearly as good I find with cast metal model figures. For example the drum on the British Drummer in the rear of the picture below was not round. Its sides were straight making it more of a sausage shape than a drum shape.

But it was enjoyable working in a different figure modelling media, and I look forwards to the other 40+ still to do ;-)

The command stand ready painted

A Corner of Waterloo – 18th June 1815

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

I have not posted for a while as I have been planning a couple of military miniature dioramas, both of which are outside my normal 54mm field.

The first diorama is in 1/35th scale and will be a small convoy of WWII Russian vehicles and figures. This is way outside my modelling experience and, having opened the kits, I can see it will end up as quite a large undertaking once completed. But more about that project later as I start to work on it.

My latest project is called “A Corner of Waterloo – 18th June 1815″ and is also in a new scale for me, and that is 1/72nd. I have chosen this scale as the planned diorama will have around 50 figures on it and 1/72nd keeps it small for basing and display purposes.  Plastic figures are lighter too, but I find them more difficult to work with and modify than metal figures. But each to his own choice. I would have loved to have done it in 54mm lead figures, but the cost, let alone the space and final weight of the diorama would have been too much.

The figures and horses for the Corner of Waterloo are coming out of the following kits:

  • 1 kit by Italeri of “British and Prussian Allied General Staff”
  • 2 kits by Hat of “Waterloo British Line Infantry”
  • 2 kits by Italeri of “British Infantry 1815″

I have duplicated the kits as I intend to slightly modify a number of figures so that they are not all in the same basic three or four poses. The extra figures allow for slips of the modeling knife ;-)

So, after all that, what is the diorama actually about?   It is one corner of a British Square, with command and cavalry waiting behind the infantry.

Figures of what will become a commanding officer, a junior officer, and some cavalry have all been removed from their sprues, tidied up and are now awaiting undercoating. The plastic figures take some getting used to, and I look forwards to seeing how painting them will turn out.