Monday 15 March 2021

From Curt: 2mm Napoleonics (55 Points)


Here are a few additions to my 2mm Napoleonic collection which I started a few years ago.  

This project stemmed from spending years reading battlefield accounts and looking at drawings describing the formations used during the Napoleonic wars. I've always been fascinated by the 'Rock, Paper, Scissors' aspect to Napoleonic tactics. How line defeated column, cavalry smashed lines, squares bested cavalry, etc. So I wanted 'gaming pieces' to reflect these formations on the tabletop, at a ground scale that was somewhat closer to reality. What you see here is essentially a wide-angle perspective of how armies may have looked in the field, which oddly appeals to my lizard brain.

Here we have a force of Austrian infantry arrayed in line, a regiment of French cavalry, a deployed battery of French artillery and a command stand. The 'smoke' markers are simply layered MDF painted to suit.


In my collection I have each unit illustrated in the various formations in which it could have been deployed. So an infantry unit will have bases depicting it in line, column and square; cavalry are in lines and columns of squadrons and artillery are shown both limbered-up and deployed with their trail of caissons and wagons. Here are five battalions of Austrian line infantry arrayed in a 3-rank line formation.


A regiment of Imperial Dutch Lancers in a 2-rank line, ready for the charge. I love dudes in pink.


As you can see with the artillery battery below, I wanted to reflect the depth of these formations which can be quite striking. Often, we think of a Horse & Musket battery as being simply a line of big guns, whereas in fact a deployed artillery battery was a tremendously deep column, with successive lines of caissons and supply wagons servicing the guns. I find reflecting this on the tabletop to be really interesting as one quickly discovers that these formations need a lot of space to both deploy and maneuver.


A French upper level command stand.


In addition I put together a pair of Built-Up-Area (BUA) tiles to represent a quasi-Germanic aesthetic. Again, like the other figures here, these building models are from Forward March Figures. I tried to mimic the organic flow of an older city, with its streets and avenues sprouting from all over the compass. 


I had fun making the various parks and green spaces. Sarah says she wants to have coffee in the bistro next to the Cathedral. :)


I also made a few trees for the bases using my tried-and-true method of clipping figure foam packing into roughly spherical shapes and gluing brad nails into them to serve as trunks. I then coated them with Liquitex, give them a quick paint and drybrush and presto, 2mm scaled trees!



As to points, well let's just use the established matrix for 2mm bases, even though these are substantially larger. So that would give me 5 points for each infantry (5), cavalry (1) and artillery base (4), making that 50 points. For the Built-Up-Area, each base is only 4" square so let's keep it simple and call it 1/4 of a terrain cube, so 5 points. 55 in total and my 11th 'Squirrel Point'!

- Curt


24 comments:

  1. Excellent work, Curt! Love your trees and BUA. The whole post definitely inspires me and almost gives me enough courage to start on my own 2mm stuff...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Martijn. I'm delighted if my efforts help stoke the mills of industry (no matter how tiny). :)

      Delete
  2. Some impressive hobby engineering Curt, well done.

    ReplyDelete
  3. 2mm my god how do you see them to paint.

    They are really good

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Ian! Really, it's all just a high-level abstraction with lots of blocked in colour. It's more about the arrangement of the models and their basing than the painting.

      Delete
  4. fantastic, in both senses of the word

    ReplyDelete
  5. Wow! Awesome work Curt. 2mm is great as you can really get a sense of the sizes of formations. Especially the depth, as wonderfully illustrated by your deployed artillery, which I think thanks to rules normally focusing on the frontage is often overlooked. I cannot wait to see your 80 gun grand battery!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Edward, very kind of you. I don't think I have it in me to do ten of these, but I may be able to scrape together a 'baby-grand battery' once all is said and done. Wish me luck!

      Delete
  6. Brilliant stuff. Your organic towns are really nice as well, and begging for outskirts...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Barks, I hope to do some D shaped additions to mimic outskirts.

      Delete
  7. Splendid impression of the mass of troops and the built up areas work wonderfully well!
    Best Iain

    ReplyDelete
  8. I’m looking forward to pushing these around the tabletop. Looks great

    ReplyDelete
  9. Of course, you're absolutely right Sander. I think I mixed up my recollections of English churches (with their abundant greenery) with more cobbled European examples. My bad. At lease I can use the greenspace for a park while a do a proper cobbled version in the future.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Fabulous work Curt! I was hoping you'd get back to this project at some point and well, here you are. The troops are great but the scenery is just superb. Love the city tiles and the cathedral, even if it's surrounded by a little too much greenery for a Middle-European church/ cathedral ;-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Nick! Yes, my love of gardening and all things green has made my tiles a little ahistorical. Oh well!

      Delete
  11. I did say I was being an arse and nitpicking on a brilliant piece of work didn't I ;-)

    ReplyDelete