April 1898: The Trans-Pecos of Texas is a land of extremes, hot days, cold nights, desolate terrain, sparse population and barely suppressed lawlessness far from everywhere. American and Mexican garrisons soak in the beaching sun, attempting to maintain order as bandidos and Comanches cross the border as suits their own nefarious purposes. Those caught on the wrong, side of the border may yet still face what passed for justice in these parts - or be used as coin to trade for those caught on the other side.
The prisoner waiting to be exchanged |
So begins the setting for today's game of (heavily) modified Legends of the Old West. When I first began wargaming, about thirty years ago in the late 1990s, blogging was the province of self-created websites. Ian Croxhall's The Amazing Adventures of the Red Shadow was one of the sites I had bookmarked and routinely read through for new games featuring the Algerian Goumiere scout and the various misadventures of the French, Germans and Italians across the North African littoral. One of my favorite scenarios was The Red Shadow and the Salami Exchange, which featured the French and Italians attempting to exchange prisoners and the Mujahidine crash the party. Hilarity ensues, naturally.
Side profile, perhaps as a mug shot? |
I've always wanted to adapt that to a setting that suits my collections, and the US/Mexico border was the best fit. However, the setting required an unarmed figure to serve as one of the prisoners being exchanged. Fortunately, I had just the figure, already mounted on the base and just needing primed, flocked and painted.
He's a 28mm Wargames Foundry figure from the Old West pack OW166 - Mexican Villagers (2nd from the right above), painted in about 2 hours Friday night after work. I went a bit lighter for his clothes, using Delta Ceramcoat Antique White and then Reaper Linen White, washed with grey and then rehighlighted. His straw hat was a Reaper triad (Chestnut Gold, Palomino Gold and Buckskin Pale), which I washed with Army Painter Soft Tone to bring out the details. He was the first figure I had painted since the last Challenge, and having caught Bargain Bob's Basement Bunker version of the various diseases circulating around California for Christmas and New Years, getting started painting anything was a real effort. It's not efficient by any means, but it was fun just working on a single figure.
I love how sullen his expression came out |
Despite lint-rolling my photobooth to remove all stray flock and static grass and making sure my miniatures were well lit, the photos turned out rather disappointing, especially compared to shots from today's game. They have a yellow tone and colors are washed out, which does not usually happen when taking gaming photos using the exact same iPhone. The edge of the base in the photo above should be jet black, and so should his hair. Upon reflection, I suspect the problem may be that the black background and high lighting overwhelm the iPhone camera at standard settings and wash things out.
F Troop, 7th Cavalry escorting the prisoner to the exchange on the bridge over the Rio Grande |
For those interested in his fate, Loco Sanchez was duly handed over to the Mexicans, put in the prisoner wagon, and taken to the jail in El Paso del Norte. However, when negotiating the narrow streets, the wagon bucked dodging a small child. Gunfire from the Mexican garrison killed the wagon driver guarding the prisoner, probably by mistake. Sanchez jumped down from the wagon, made a run for it, and was then shot while attempting escape, bleeding out in a dark alley.
He's making a run for it! |
Life is cheap in the Trans-Pecos. |
Scoring:
- 1 28mm foot figure @ 5 points per figure = 5 points
I too followed the Red Shadow, back in the day. Nice work.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I appreciate it.
DeleteHe was the first figure I finished since the last Challenge, and he went together pretty easily. And, of course, suffered the fate of most figures their first tabletop outing.
Thanks, Sylvain!
ReplyDeleteI actually cheated with the white, and deliberately chose to do an off-white.When I was painting my Sassanid bolt throwers for Challenge CIV, I deliberately experimented with cream and gray off-whites, and was rather pleased with how they turned out. So now I have a few cheat recipes for unbleached or “white” clothes.
Nice figure, excellent story. I would like to see (and read!) more. Good luck in the Challenge, Robert!
ReplyDeleteAwesome, thanks! I did take a lot of photos of the game, so should probably rejuvenate my blog and write it up.
DeleteSimple but useful figure!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Barks!
DeleteGreat figures. Getting good photos is trickier than it would seem. He looks fab on the table top.
ReplyDeleteIt is! I love Curt’s crisp black photography, but it’s been really difficult to achieve.
DeleteNice work, Robert! And an interesting topic to boot.
ReplyDeleteI found that using much less light in a photo booth helps with decent pictures. Since I don't own any other camera than my iPhone anymore I've actually done away with the Photo Booth completely as pictures taken just on my desk using my painting lamp turn out way better.
Thanks!
DeleteI’m not completely ready to give up on the photo booth, but I am digging into some miniature photography websites to see if I can solve the problem.
Spite may not be a spot in Dante’s hell for Challenge XV, but it is an effective motivator!
Great story and figure.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteGreat story and nice in-game photos!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDeleteMy iPhone usually takes superb in-game photography, so the photobooth failure is really frustrating.
Great entry Rob! Really like the background you provide.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Curt! I always try to give an interesting background for all of my entries. I have always enjoyed the narrative that goes into most wargaming blogs, so I figure others do too!
DeleteGreat info and a great figure.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ray!
DeleteI love a bit of Legends of the old west. Great report.
ReplyDeleteHeavily modified, it’s one of my gaming groups standards!
Delete