Welcome to the Painting Challenge. Here you will find the fabulous, fevered work of miniature painters from around the world. While participants come from every ethnicity, gender, age and nationality, they have three things in common: they love miniatures, they enjoy a supportive community, and they want to set themselves against the Challenge. This site features the current year's event along with the archives of past Painting Challenges. Enjoy your visit and remember to come back soon.
Sunday, 23 February 2025
From TeemuL: German halftracks (20 points)
Sunday, 19 March 2023
From BenitoV: Last Jump on the Landing Zone (20 points)
It's Father's Day in Spain today and family duties (including the traditional lunch with the extended family) kept me busier than initially expected this weekend. Despite that, I've managed to paint 4 Fallschirmjager in early war uniform, and believe or not, I have finished with the a project started during the lockdown in 2020.
The LMG team is a 3D printed model (in one piece) from Eskice Miniatures. The individula model with the ammo box is from the plastic Warlord range.
I have to say that Eskice's FJs are not the best designed models from this manufacturer (unlike for example the German motorbikes). The uniform is not exactly historical (the jumping boots for example look more American than German) and some of the gear elements were not used by the Fallschirmjager in 1940-41
In any case I liked this model in particular because of the animated poses and sense of action.
Tuesday, 7 March 2023
From BenitoV: More German Motorbikes (20 points)
As a continuation with the topic of my submission of last week, I bring for this Tuesday more German Early War goodies, in the form of a motorbike with sidecar, to be used as the LMG support for my motorized unit.
I have a second model in store but I could not finish basing the model in time. Actually the support unit was supposed to be a total of three of these bikes with sidecars ... but it seems that I forgot to print the third file and unfortunately I have the printer in my family's vacation house (closed until Spring).
As with the motorbikes presented last week, this is a Eskice model. Nice detail and very dynamic poses as usual, although the face sculpting is slightly cartoonie.
So small addition to my Challenge score this week: after requesting clarification from the minion-in-charge, I was told this model will be worth 20 points, as it comprises two vehicles with two riders (each 10 points)
Thursday, 27 January 2022
From Nick: 20mm German 8.8cm Flak 36/37 (36 points)
Monday, 3 January 2022
From FrederickC: Early-WW2 Germans (155 points)
My second submission for this year's painting challenge is a selection of early war units appropriate for a German Panzer Division. They include a squad of Kradschützen (motorcycle troops), a Sd.Kfz. 222 light armoured reconnaissance vehicle, and a platoon of Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf B light tanks.
The Kradschützen are a mix of Black Tree Design and Bolt Action miniatures for a total of nine figures on five motorcycles, with two where the passenger is riding in a sidecar, and two where the passenger is riding pillion. I picked up the two Black Tree Design motorcycles a number of years ago at an estate sale, and the assembly looked rather daunting with the bike, the handle bars, and the riders all being separate pieces. I wanted to flesh them out a bit, and ordered two motorcycles from Warlord Games where the passenger was riding in a side car. One more motorcycle was ordered a few years later, again from Warlord Games, but this time with the passenger riding pillion. If I thought Black Tree Design bikes were daunting, the ones from Warlord Games consisted of 10 separate pieces, and didn't come with assembly instructions. I was able to find those online, but to get everything to fit correctly was really tricky, especially since the handle bar and the driver's arms came as a single piece.
With much patience, I was successful in getting everything together so that it all looked right, although the drivers still don't seem to be sitting properly on the seat. The instruction for the bikes with side cars showed stowage satchels attached to the sidecar, but none came with the kits. I did get enough for a single bike in the kit with the passenger riding pillion. These got moved over to the sidecars, one to each, and the second stowage bin coming from my bits box along with a gas mask canister. Three of the bikes were mounted on long bases that came from Warlord Games, while the bikes with sidecars were mounted on bases cut from old plastic gift cards. Everything was primed in black and then painted with Vallejo or AK Interactive acrylics. They are now ready to take the field as part of the 8th Panzer Division.
The Sd.Kfz. 222 light armoured car was another acquisition from the above mentioned estate sale. It was a multi-part metal casting which I think is an old Battle Honors kit. The scale looks closer to 1/48 than 1/56, and although the body is hollow, it still weighs in at 266g (almost 9.5oz). In fact, it is so heavy that the axles that came with the model were unable to support the weight without bending. I had to pull the wheels off again and replace the axles with lengths of florist wire that were much stiffer.
The fit of the pieces was pretty wonky, and I had to fill a number of gaps with epoxy putty. The rear fenders were a single piece that were difficult enough to fit to the chassis, but the front fenders were even worse. They came as two separate pieces, and the fit to the chassis just didn't work as all the angles were slightly off. Eventually I gave up and fashioned the front fenders out of a single piece of thin plastic card. Once all the fenders were in place, I made some headlights out of the heads of pushpins that I have filed flat on one side. Finally I added the shovel and the rolled tarp from my bits box. The commander that came with the model was wearing an Einheitsmütze, which is more mid to late war, so I replaced him with a figure from a Bandai tank kit. The vehicle was painted in a similar fashion to the Kradschützen, and then some AK Splattereffects Dry Mud was applied. It will make a useful addition to my early war Germans.
Lastly I have a platoon of three 1/56 resin Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf B light tanks from Warlord Games that I purchased as part of a bulk order along with DallasE. I liked how he mounted his on bases to make them a bit more compatible with 1/48 and 1/50 scale vehicles, so I did likewise. Assembly was pretty straight forward with the tracks, etc, fitting well to the chassis. I used magnets to attach the turrets, countersinking them into the chassis and the turret itself. The only flaw was that two of the exhaust pipes were not well cast, so I carved the partly formed bits away, and rebuilt the exhaust with some copper wire and the insulating sleeve. These were then painted using the same technique as for the armoured car. They were then mounted on the bases that had already been prepared with most of the sand, paint, and flocking before gluing the vehicles in place. The red vehicle numbers and German crosses on the tanks are appropriate for the France 1940 campaign.
The points being claimed are as follows:
10 x 28mm figures @ 5 points each = 50 points
(I am counting the tank and armoured car commanders as half a figure each)
5 x 28mm 'mount' @ 5 points each = 25 points
(I am counting the motorcycles as a mount rather than a vehicle)
4 x 28mm vehicles @ 20 points each = 80 points
Lots of early German mechanized goodies here Frederick. I quite like the motorcycle troops, they have a nice Wild Bunch vibe to them. I think that you are correct on the scoring of the bikes, but no doubt someone (Tamsin?) will correct us if we are wrong.
From FrederickC: Early Panzerkampfwagen VI 'Tiger I' [Death Star] (40 points)
This is my first submission for the Challenge XII Quadrant, and I will be starting at the Death Star with a Panzerkampfwagen VI Ausführung H, also called the Tiger I, of the 502nd Heavy Panzer Battalion. The battalion was the first unit to receive and field the Tiger I in August 1942, and it was one of the most successful German heavy tank battalions, claiming the destruction of 1,400 tanks and 2,000 guns.
The model is a 1/48 scale Bandai kit that I picked up on eBay when I first started doing 25-28mm World War Two gaming. Apparently this is a big 'can of worms' among participants in the painting challenge, but back then there were very few vehicles available in 1/56 scale, so most of our group members gravitated to either 1/48 plastic kits or 1/50 diecast models.
The Death Star connection is the 'Of Questionable Design', specifically that the Tiger I is considered to be over-engineered, using expensive materials and labour-intensive production methods. In the early period it was prone to certain types of track failures and breakdowns and was in general limited in range by its high fuel consumption. It was expensive to maintain, but generally mechanically reliable. However, it was difficult to transport and vulnerable to immobilisation when mud, ice, and snow froze between its overlapping and interleaved Schachtellaufwerk-pattern road wheels, often jamming them solid.
The validity of the problem of the overlapping road wheels was proven when the kit arrived from the seller. It was obviously a second hand kit as it had already been started, but what the original owner had done was glue both the inner and outer road wheels on all the odd numbered axles before realizing their mistake. I contacted the seller about the problem, who refunded my money without wanting me to send the kit back. It languished for many years in my pile of unfinished projects until I thought that a repair was possible. I used a fine saw blade to cut off all the outer wheels from the odd numbered axles. Now all the inner wheels could glued onto the even numbered axles. I drilled holes into the axles and the back of the wheels I had removed with a pin vice to take a short piece of florist wire to provide strength to the joint when I glued them back in place with a little bit of epoxy putty to fill the slight gap. Once all that was done, the rest of the kit was assembled as per the instructions.
Prior to this, I had already acquired a Solido 1/50 diecast Tiger I in grey. It is visible in the background of the pics below, but not part of the submission. Other than a bit of tweaking, new decals, and adding a muzzle break, the Solido model is as I bought it. Since it was already painted in Panzer grey, I wanted to use the same paint scheme with the Bandai model to make them part of the same unit. After priming it with black, I used AK Interactive acrylic 704 Dunkelgrau, and then drybrushed the raised areas and corners with a lighter grey. Special parts like the tools and tow cables were painted appropriate colours, and a few parts got either a black or a dark brown wash. Once the tracks were on, I hit the lower areas with AK Splattereffects Dry Mud.
The points being claimed are as follows:
1 x 28mm vehicle @ 20 points
Quadrant Challenge 'Death Star' - 'Of Questionable Design' - 20 Points
Great work on the Tiger Frederick. I was amused how your issues with the partly made kit mirrored the real life issue with this beast. Nice weathering over the grey pain work. I love the results people get from their WW2 vehicles but am warded off by terms such as "kit assembly", "decals" and "weathering".
A minor editing point - Curt prefers that we use Helvetica font for our posts.
You are quite right that there is some debate over the "correct" vehicle scale for 28mm war-games. There are actually three factions "1/56 or die", "1/48 or die" and "whatever, they're just toy tanks". Being of the third school I'll leave the field of battle to the other two factions.
Friday, 19 February 2021
From BenitoM: Taking a Smoke - The Guardroom (25 points)
Moving from the Gallery of Ancestors, I stepped into The Guardroom. Having finished in the office early this Friday, I had the opportunity to make a quick paint work to this 2WW German model that fits nicely in the room's theme
I have had this model for ages, but I cannot recall when I bought it or even the manufacturer. So, if anyone around can identify the brand, I will really appreciate. The model is interesting in two ways: it wears the Zeltbahn cammo poncho/tent (and I do not know a lot of models wearing this characteristic uniform piece) and he is smoking a cigarette while on guard duty, providing the model some character.
The model is a metal 28mm figure and will make a nice addition to my games attached to some headquarters building or check point position.
With this entry I add another 25 points ( 1 x 28mm @5 points + room bouns 20p) to my Challenge scoring this year and I gets very close now to my 500 points target. We still have one month to go, so I expect to comfortably reach and likely exceed the target (and it will be the first time since I've been participating in the Challenge)
Monday, 8 February 2021
From Dallas: Bolt Action 88mm AT Gun Crew (30 points)
However, even though the gun was finished, to use it on the table you need a crew! Warlord Games came through (after a fashion) with an excellent 6-man crew set for the Flak 18. I say "after a fashion" because of the standard Warlord shipping faff... basically, although I'd ordered the models on 18 December, they didn't get into the post until well after New Year's... "we moved facilities, COVID-19 has disrupted the supply chain, there was another lockdown, etc...", but somehow they'd managed in the meantime to find the time to put together, promote on social media, and post out a bunch of their "mystery boxes" (unsaleable junk boxes?), which was annoying... but I didn't bother ordering one of those as I already have a laser pointer I bought at the Dollar Store, ta very much :-)
Anyway, the crew eventually arrived and paint was slathered upon them. I think they look quite good crewing the gun. The models came with separate heads so I used the ones that made the crew most flexible in terms of period.
Here are the lads lined up. I have to say the heads fit really well and the poses are quite good. All in all a great purchase for seven quid.
Wednesday, 26 February 2020
From MartinN: Wehrmacht staff car, Civilian cars - 60 points
These three vehicles were part of a Kickstarter and actually the main reason I jumped in. Civilian or better civilian cars in army service are pretty hard to come by, even in 1/48 let alone 1/56. And if so they're pretty expensive too. Rubicon Models do a Citroen Traction Avant 11CV which admittedly looks a lot nicer than these models but seems to be sold out most of the time... of course not since I backed this Kickstarter though.
With both extremes tested I thought I might try something in between and printed this Citroen 11CV in 1/52. Now comparing all three I think this is the one I like the most as it sits nicely in between 1/56 which is actually too narrow for wargaming figures and 1/48 which is too tall.
So what did I take away from this? Well, obviously there's no such thing as the perfect scale for 28mm wargaming figures. As ever it comes down to personal choice. The one prefers his models to actually look as if the figures could actually squeeze in there, while the next (like me) doesn't like it when his toys are too high and too long. If we were totally consistent we would have to field vehicles which were roughly 1/48 in width while just 1/56 in length/ height... and that'd be a rather ungainly sight I bet. Maybe I should still try to print one such abomination, just for reference purposes though.
So, with yet another pet peeve out of the way (there are obviously quite some references to Y-webbing as of late ;-) ) I claim 60 points for three 28mm sized vehicles.
DaveD - Ok then.. scale, scale,scale.. is 28mm a scale or a size description - discuss... - this can indeed go on endlessly in this hobby - but i do think your visual "test" is a great one. I agree the 1/52nd looks best. you have done as usual a great job on bringing them to life.
I do hoped you have loosened that Y webbing though..the chafing may get rough if the rivets take a while to count ;-)
right with that i am packing in my shift as i have a stoopid silly start time in the morning - so i will leave you to tender mercies of the Thursday rockmeister MartinC. I suspect you will be threatened with a test.
Tuesday, 18 February 2020
By MartinN - German light mortar and observers (20 points)
Mixing the DAK parts with the Early War Grenadiers proofed a little difficult and needed some surgery with scalpel and glue. As I was at it anyway I also built me two observers/ spare crew, one of which from the plastic Soviet Infantry I quite like to use the prone Soviet figures for Germans as they (obviously) don't wear that stupid Y-Tragegestell (Y-webbing) and thus work nicely for officer types. Just needed a pair of shoulder boards, easily sculpted on with Green Stuff.
Speaking of the Y-Tragegestell, this one is another pet peeve of mine. Looking at pictures of German soldiers (especially useful in this regard are pictures of surrendering Germans, i.e. before they're being disarmed) and from stories of family members who served during the war, I came to the conclusion that they were not that often worn in actual combat, especially not when troops were fighting from prepared positions or as part of a reconnaissance.
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Three prone and a kneeling figure should add another 12.5 points towards my total, but given the -very- minor conversion work on the Soviet figure I'd happily accept 13 points.
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By Paul
Stunning work as always Martin! Noting the conversion work, detailing and basing I am awarding a total of 20 points for this lovely little crew
Thursday, 13 February 2020
From MartinN: Cats big and small (25pts)
Of course I don't bring an airbrush with me but have done the base work at home and only did the detail work in the hotel. The Puma was started during last years challenge anyway as I intended it for the tutorial I did for Patt Smith's latest book "SETTING THE SCENE Vol. 2: The Mediterranean". In the end I decided against it, the Puma was never used in the mediterranean theater anyway, and did paint up a more appropriate Italian M13/40.
The Panzer V or "Panther" as it's universally known was developed as a response to the Russian T-34. Consequently it saw it's first use in combat during Operation Zitadelle, probably better known as the battle of Kursk, in 1943. The Operation was postponed several times as to make sure the brand spanking new Panther tanks would be available for the offensive.
These repeated postponements arguably led to the eventual German defeat at Kursk as the Soviets were well aware of the German attack plans and prepared their defense accordingly.
While the Panther was still unreliable, especially the transmission proofed problematic, it nonetheless showed great potential and saw service on all fronts till the end of the war. The Panther is seen by many as the pinnacle of German Panzer development in WW2 and was probably the best tank to see service during the war. Luckily for the Allies it was never available in sufficient quantities to really make a difference. Some historians even go as far as to suggest time and resources needed for the Panther would have been better spent producing more Panzer IV tanks. Personally I don't thinkit would have made much of a difference as more often than not the lack of fuel and/ or allied air superiority prohibited the use of any Panzers be them Tigers, Panthers or the venerable Panzer IV.
The SdKfz 234/2 "Puma" is probably the best known of all the German reconnaissance vehicle of WW2. It was deployed exclusively in Russia and the western front with no units being sent to the Balkans or Italy. The Puma only saw a very limited production run with just 101 vehicles built from late 1943 till late 1944.
Pumas were very successfully deployed during the fighting in Normandy but the fierce fighting also meant that they became a scarce commodity later on. At Arnhem 5 of the few remaining vehicles allegedly took part in the fighting but I couldn't find definitive (i.e. pictorial) proof of that allegation by both Anthony Beevor (Arnhem) and Robert Kershaw (It Never Snows In September).
Nonetheless, just the pure possibility of Pumas at Arnhem was enough of an incentive for me to paint up a second one. It got a SS license plate and the commander sports a field cap in pea-dot-pattern camouflage, so it should fit nicely with my plans for a SS force for the upcoming "Arnhem" supplement for Chain of Command by the TooFatLardies.
The Panther is a lovely model from Rubicon Models and was a breeze to assemble and paint. The Puma however is a Warlord Games/ Italeri collaboration and was a pain in the backside to assemble. Two of the wheels came off during painting due to the fragile (scale model like) under carriage. Also the wheels are hollow, something I absolutely hate even if not visible normally.
Tank commanders are Perry and despite their usual abysmal casting add a nice touch to these two vehicles.
As the Puma was already started before the challenge I claim just 25 points, 5 for two half figures and 20 for the Panther.
These are brilliant, the colours work fantastically. And much better than watching the hotel TV.
Martin