Tuesday, 1 January 2019

From KenR : 28mm Arab Heavy Cavalry (122 pts)


Good day, hopefully your head won't be too fuzzy after yesterday's party, Happy New Year to all you lovely people.

Entry number 2 this year is from my second theme of the challenge, my 28mm Crusades Project.


Here we have 12 figures ready to join Saladins ranks. They are from the Gripping Beast plastic box set called 28mm Arab Heavy Cavalry ! So 12 x 10 is a nice 120 points to add to the 80 I bagged for the Italians which keeps me nicely on track for my target. I have used the Spear arms from the box for these to give a uniform weapon, except for the unit leader who has a sword and the musician who has a trumpet type thingy taken from Infantry set by the same company.


We have bounced around a few rule sets for the Crusades but Deus Vult seem to be the front runner at the moment. Painting wise the horses are done in my usual oil wipe method with Acrylics on the riders. I got another couple of boxes of these at Xmas so they can go in the back of the queue.


On the paint table at the moment is my entry to the Recon round along with the next 8 figures of my Papal Pike Block. With some of the Italian Wars units being pretty big I plan to do a small 6 figure Cavalry Unit each week (having the points tally moving works to motivate me rather than going for the bomb) and when that's in the bag I will work on bits of the larger units.

Welcome to 2019, Regards Ken




Wonderful entry Ken, these are quite beautiful. I like the variety of poses and shades on the horses and riders which makes every one look subtly unique. I can almost feel the ground shaking as they charge... I wouldn't want to have to face these fella's in battle! The hand painted shields also add some nice detail and are worthy of a couple of bonus points in my book, bringing the total for these up to 122 points. 
Lee

From IannickM : First submission - African critters (20pts)

Hi everyone, I'm finally joining the fun today after a week or two of much drinking and much eating! Although I did manage to do a bit of painting.

To start the challenge, here is four African animals; two crocodiles and two lions. They were given to me by Laurie for my birthday, and I do try to paint the gifts I'm given! Yeah I'm considerate like that. They actually fit quite well with my Biblical project, well basically my Canaanite army, and If I ever get a biblical game on I'll certainly use them to liven up the wargame table.

The figures are from Foundry's always excellent range of animals, and they were a welcome and fun change of pace what I usually paint. I'm quite happy with the lions fur colour, I think I got that right, although the mane could be a tad darker.

I used the same style of basing as my Biblical project to tie them in. Both crocs and lions were a first for me.

Most of my challenge will consist of undead, as I'm building an Undead army for the Old World Army Challenge, my Oldhammer painting contest starting on January 1st, so I figured I would use the days before 2019 to work on some living stuff! More to come next week, as I'm putting the final touches on a unit. After that, expect a lot of miserable bags of bones, decaying Zombies and spooky ghosts.

And happy new year y'all!!




A Wonderful opening entry. I have always found animals to be very challenging to paint because one wrong colour and they don't look 'real'. I think you have the colours spot on with these (even the Lions manes) and the arid base scheme works really well to bring out the colour pallet of the animals. I'm looking forward to seeing your undead army for Oldhammer but in the meantime you've earned yourself a solid 20 points to get going with. 
Lee

From MartinC - All the Comforts of Home (133pts)

For my 1st post under Minion Lee (reporting for duty and may i say you look great in those dungarees but a little jaundiced) I have a bit of an eclectic post, good for capturing squirrels. 1st up is a, well how to put this politely, camp support. To put it bluntly a tart in a cart.


A travelling woman of the night, or afternoon if needed, with her cart and maidservant discussing the price. The sulters cart is from Westfalia and a nice model.


The officer and the lady are foundry but the maidservant is the Partizan freebie of Mary Seacole, sorry that I re purposed her to a less honourable job.

I'm pretty chuffed with this, it seemed to come together nicely.

Horse is blissfully eating...

There is even a cat hiding under the cart

I've been moving on with the Indian army and have finished all the archers

Another 7 bases to give me 22 altogether


Couple of command stands. These are Xyston miniatures and are very nice figs if a little big. As was tradition the officers have dyed their beards red and blue. The banners are the shield cloths from a pack of Theban hoplites by Victrix. One of them is supposed to have the word warrior in Sandskrit but as it's my 1st go of writing in Sandskrit it probably says soup

Finally 3 Pendraken 10mm ACW artillery pieces to complete the collection. The figures are great but 10mm is too small for me to paint and have fun doing it. Bound to buy some more


So that is 3 scales and 3 periods. The maths is going to be a bugger so I'll help Lee (he is new to his job and may need a hand)
Sutlers wagon = 1 vehicle, 1 horse, 3 figures and a cat plus minion generosity  = 20 + 5 + 3x5 + 2 for the cat = 42
Indians - 36 figures @2 pts each = 72 plus any hand painted flag loveliness bonus  
ACW = 3 field guns with 3 crew each = 15
Total =  129 ish



Great entry Martin, I really love that Cart and Tart in 28mm! I love the fact you have turned it into a story with the little details like the cat slinking under the waggon, the baggage and even the fodder basket for the horse. I concur with your points for these, plus a couple extra for the little extra details bringing that entry up to 44 points. 

I love the 15mm Indians as well, I'm not familiar with that manufacturer but I'll have to check them out. A nice solid entry and a couple of extra points for the two flags brings that to 74 points. 

Finally the artillery, what's not to love about artillery (well, not if you're on the receiving end of course). 15 points well earned for these. 

With the little extras that brings this entry up to a very respectable 133 points. Nice work Sir!
Lee

Tuesday Minion reporting for duty

Your Tuesday Minion; BigLee, also
known as "The Laughing Idiot"
Welcome to Tuesday, and what a wonderful day it is too. This is my first stint as a Minion and if discussion from behind the sandbags it to be believed, I'm in for a baptism of fire. I've been lucky enough to take part in the Painting Challenge for several years and I suppose it was inevitable that I'd eventually draw the short straw and be asked to help out. Seriously though, I'm deeply honoured to be involved and have been looking forward to 'getting my hands dirty' for weeks. I'll do my best not to screw up.

As a new Minion I think it would be a good idea to say a little about me; after all the Tuesday Crew are putting their entries in my hands for the next few weeks. I've been a gamer since I was a wee lad. I started back in the 70's with D&D but quickly discovered tabletop wargames like Warhammer and 40k. From the very beginning I painted mini's for my games and I always insisted on only fielding fully painted miniatures. Unfortunately my painted armies would regularly be beaten to a bloody pulp by the unpainted lead of opposing players. Amazingly that didn't dishearten me and for a long long time I continued to paint mini's, play RPG's and get thrashed at wargames. Inevitably however my group of school friends began to disperse as jobs and women lured them away and I spent several years with a dwindling gaming group playing fewer and fewer games. My 'Hobby' looked like it was in jeopardy but things were about to take an unexpected turn. About a decade ago I discovered blogging and pretty soon after I found myself wargaming with an irreverent group of scoundrels based in Kent. Try as they might they haven't put me off and I'm still turning up to games uninvited, impressing them with my lack of tactical aptitude (especially my ability to consistently mishandle cavalry) and my freakishly bad dice rolls.

I learned something interesting today. The name Tuesday derives from the Old English Tiwesdæg and Middle English Tewesday, which means "the day of Tiw or Týr", the god of single combat, law and justice in Norse mythology. How very appropriate! So here I sit, hand resting on a pile of rulebooks, ready to judge today's combatants. Let the Tuesday Tourney begin! 

Monday, 31 December 2018

From Curt: Fighting Fae - 'Tom Thumb' and his Furies (44 Points)


I first saw these figures last spring on the Eureka Miniatures' Facebook page (lurking under Sarah's profile) and knew I had to get a set. They immediately reminded me of Brian Frond and Alan Lee's illustrations in 'Faeries' published way back in the late 70s when I was just a kid.


These are about 20mm in height, but their very slight physiques make them look smaller. Even though they've been scaled to blend with the other 28mm figures in Eureka's fantasy range, I like to think of them at being 'true scale', 1:1. To reinforce this I have Tom leaping from a thimble (kindly sourced from Lynn, Peter's (infinitely) better half).



I love how dynamic the poses are. In my minds eye, their movement echos films like 'Peter Pan' and 'Princess Mononoke'.



The sculpts are very fine and intricate, with each figure's sword even having a unique basket/guard detail. Really lovely stuff.




So, how do you get these wonderful little gems? I'll be frank here: I absolutely love Eureka's stuff. It's creative, beautifully sculpted and masterfully cast. But don't ask me how to actually source these freakin' models (I finally had to send then a direct query as I was completely stumped). I find the Eureka website has been ingeniously designed to discourage people from actually purchasing their products. It's completely impenetrable and torturous - it's as if the site was designed by the Marquis de Sade and coded by Kafka. By the time you find something you've been looking for you feel like they should be paying you for the aggravation and waste of time. 

Sigh... , but I digress. 

Yes, I'll still be there, searching and clicking like a madman, when the next shiny thing emerges from Eureka...

I feel better now (rocks back and forth), no really, I do.

Points? Hmm, eleven 20mm fae folk should put me at 44 points. 



Happy New Year to you and yours, everyone!


____________________________________________


Happy New Year, Curt! I feel that I am luckily close to Eureka's Australian-based operations, but I was unfamiliar with these gorgeous fey figures. The thimble is a lovely touch.

Barks

Elves are wonderful. They provoke wonder. Elves are marvellous. They cause marvels. Elves are fantastic. They create fantasies. Elves are glamorous. They project glamour. Elves are enchanting. They weave enchantment. Elves are terrific. They beget terror. The thing about words is that meanings can twist just like a snake, and if you want to find snakes look for them behind words that have changed their meaning. No one ever said elves are nice. Elves are bad.
Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies

From ScottM - Fantasy Monsters (41 points)

Greetings all! For my first submission for this year's paint challenge I'm going with a small handful of fantasy figures. All of these figures will get used in my groups' Frostgrave games. First up is a pair of larger monsters.

These two figures are an Umber Hulk from Wizkids and a Carrion Worm from Reaper's Bones line. Simple nice figures that were a breeze to paint up.

These three figures are a Reaper Bones Blood Demon and a pair of Wizkids Myconids. Really easy figures to paint up. And lastly are two packs of Reaper Dungeon Vermin.
Simple figs, not really much you can do when painting up small bugs.

Point wise, everything is 28mm so I think it's probably 5 points for all but the vermin and maybe 2 points per vermin base? So that should be about 37 points.

Hello Scott, great work on these hero-fodder. The umber hulk is a classic, and I do think we could all do with more fungus-men in our games. I've given you a few extra points for the larger monsters taking you to 41.

Barks

From MikeW - 28mm 17th Century Polish Hajduk Infantry - 100 Points

So here it is the first ever post to an AHPC event....

Assault Group Polish Hajduks

These are 28mm Assualt Group, Polish Hajduk Infantry who will make up a unit in the Polish intervention force in my Siege of Vienna (1683) project.

The infantry in Polish service at this time were very much considered to be second to the cavalry arm - with the famous Polish Winged Hussars, supported by Pancerni armoured cavalry and Cossack Irregulars.

The infantryman was considered a peasant - hence the name Hajduk, armed with a musket and a sword and dressed in simple coat.

Many units were however, well drilled and well dressed, this unit being one of those that helped liberate Vienna.
The raw figures!

The figures were source from eBay, without the optimum mix of musketeers, Command and NCOs armed with poleaxes! This this unit is painted as 5 bases of 4 figures, 20 in all.

Four man base, 3 x Musketeers plus
1 x NCO with Poleaxe
Eagle-eyed readers may note that I have painted 22 figures - optimally I would have liked a 6th base of four figures but only two suitable ones were available in  the lot! Thus I am waiting on some additional figures to be supplied to finally complete the unit to 24 in total - I will claim the points on these when I get these done!

I usually undercoat my figures with white paint, I did so with these, and began painting the blue coats, then the red trousers and coat linings. Red chest braiding was added by dry brushing over the raised detail.

Next was the leather work - belts and boots, followed by brown for the muskets and yellow/brown for the flag staffs and poleaxe shafts...

4 Musketeers in various marching poses
Metalwork next - first oily steel for musket mechanisms, barrels, sword scabbard fittings and poleaxe blades, followed by brass for buttons and sword hilts etc.

I usually paint on the flesh first, to bring the undercoated figures to life but this time for some reason, flesh was left to the end. Then hair was added for mustaches and forelocks.

The colour process is then repeated as I fix all the mistakes, smudges and other errors that I can spot before applying a coat of Dark Army Painter dip to provide shading. I always apply this by brush and work it into figures, I don't like getting too much on each figure as it would spoil the detail.

The command base was made-up pretty much as per the other bases, it consists of two standard bearers, a drummer and an officer.

The standards are made via help of Microsoft Paint and images taken form the internet.

The officers of the day were generally free to dress as they wished, I have kept this officer fairly well in tune with his unit in blue coat and red trousers

Bases are 40mm x 40mm 2mm MDF, covered with fine sand and then dry-brushed and sprinkled with electrostatic grass.
2nd NCO base

Spoiler Alert! So what's next? I have a couple options, a group of 15 foot and 2 mounted 28mm Foundry Mountain Men, these are already undercoated and will join the Texicans who are bravely fighting against Santa Anna's Mexican army. Again this batch came form eBay and strangely includes a Chinese gentleman armed with a Machette - I'm pretty sure there were no Chinese people at the Alamo but he can add colour to the Texan Independence campaign!

The other option is yet another group of eBay finds, 6 x 28mm Ottoman Light Cavalry - actually they are Mamelukes from the Reiver Castings range, with them came three Ottoman mounted officers. Again all are undercoated and awaiting a lick of paint, immediate foes to the just completed Polish Hajduks!


So Points tally: 20 x 28mm Infantry @5points each = 100 Points!

Nice work, Mike, great to have you aboard for your first Challenge! I like the details on the front of their jackets, and appreciate the description of your painting technique. A lovely first entry and a satisfying round number of points.

Barks

From MattK: First Submission - Blood and Plunder Natives and Epic 40k (100 points)

Hey everyone! This is my first time in the Challenge. Thanks for having me.

For the my first entry into the contest I wanted to paint my whole Native starter box for Blood and Plunder but Christmas got in the way of my plans. I got most of the box done but I figured it made more sense to post some progress rather than wait til next weekend to submit my first entry

First here's a shot of the whole entry.


This is the 8 Warrior Archers, 4 African Warriors and the 4 Musketeers.

And some close-ups.




In addition to getting this nice little force started I painted this Space Wolf figure as a Christmas Present for my Mom. I think he came in one of Horus Heresy boxes but I picked him up on eBay a while ago.



Finally I couldn't help myself and I broke into my stash of Epic stuff to do some test pieces for my next project. There's probably going to be a lot more of this from me through the Challenge. I bought the plastic figures and Rhinos off of eBay but the bases for the figures, dreadnaught and landraider were all 3D printed on my new printer (a Christmas present to myself).

I'm incredibly happy with how the freehanded Imperial Fist symbol turned out.



If I'm doing the math right,
  • 16 x 28mm Foot for 80 points
  • 1 x 28mm Foot for 5 more
  • 10 x 6mm foot for 5 points
  • 3 x 6mm Vehicle for 6 points
  • and whatever the dread is worth
Thanks


________________________________

G'day Matt and welcome to the Challenge!

I have to start by saying any Mom who would be happy with a Space Wolf painted up for Christmas must be truly one-of-a-kind! Does she actually play 40k or just like the miniatures? You have to give us more info than that mate...

Regards your entry, this is a cracking way to kick off. I'm stuck for which of your efforts I like best to be honest. The natives are really cool and the skin tone is great. I struggle with native tones so I really appreciate it when people get them right.

I'm also really impressed by your Imperial Fists. It's great to see the old plastic Rhinos still getting painted up. They are such an iconic looking vehicle and the mustard yellow really suits them. Well done on the Fists symbol too. Freehand at 6mm is never easy!

Your math looks pretty good to me. Let's call the Epic Dread a vehicle too and you get an extra point for the freehand symbol AND another for having the coolest of Moms. All up that's a neat 100 points to start you off. Well done indeed and keep the good stuff coming!

Cheers,
Millsy 

From FranL: Scenery of many scales (80 Points)

- Sorry folks, Curt here. I'm horning in on Barks' turf so we can clear the decks for this past week. Just a couple Holiday Challengers to go...


______________________________

It's been a while...


You see this lollipop collection before you with a selection of 28mm, HO scale and 15mm pieces of plastic, resin and metal from a host of manufactures (somethings can be used for 15mm from many scales)...



You can see windows from GZG which will be used for video monitor screens...



Barrels and containers of every size...



Planning boards, pallets, vents, furniture and computers on desks...



A majority will end up in this MDF item.........one day!



I have more to come possibly, and I apologise for leaving them on the lollipops but handy for storage until needed.

They are 1/72 items, but unaware how to score them though!

_______________________________________

First, welcome back to the Challenge, Fran! It's been a few years, so it's terrific to have you in the scrum again.

Wow, this is a treasure heap of 1/72 scale goodness. That MDF complex in the last shot looks very impressive. Is there a scenario you have in mind for it? What rules will you be using? Can I play? :) I like your use of the window frames to simulate panels of flat-screen monitors - very clever, that. 

Fran, you tell me that these roughly fill four 6x6 cubes so that puts it at 80 points. Well done Mr. Lee. And for you, the best thing about your entry is that you have twice as many points done as Ray. :)

-Curt