Morning, afternoon & evening all
Miserable Scots I hasten to add is not a title intended to upset or insult my fellow Celts but rather a description of these peasant archer figures from the Medbury Miniatures 100YW and Scottish Wars of Independence range. Medbury produce a lovely and large varied range of figures for these conflicts and these are 3D printed
I've chosen the description of miserable because of their appearance and poor attire and have painted them in muted colours. I've also chosen the word because it describes the weather on our summer break here in a little seaside village called Whangapoua in the Coromandel peninsula in NZ! We are currently cut off by the consequent flooding
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| 205mm of rain in past 24hrs with another 250mm to follow today |
Its not all bad though , though we're cut off, we're with good mates and have ample supplies of food and wine.
| Scottish peasant archers defending a village |
| A few close ups showing the variations |
| Ragged and poorly armed |
| Many are depicted in bare feet |
| the lack of equipment meant they were quick to paint |
| from behind shooting at haystacks |
I'd initially planned to paint a unit of 24 based in 4s on 60 x60 mm bases but on reflection they may have been better arrayed in 5s on a base. I found myself with 8 left over figures and completed these in a day before leaving for our break.
My knowledge of this period is reasonably sparse but improving. I understand that the Scottish did have archers but nowhere near the numbers that opposed them in the armies of their English opponents. I've been listening to quite a bit of historical fiction set in this era and every author seems to comment on the use of ordinary hunting arrows by Scottish bowmen, decrying their lack of bodkin arrows. How accurate or true this is, I have no idea.
In summary then
32 X 28mm Scottish archers @ 5 points each = 160 points
1 Squirrel
(Squirrels to date- Berbers, Goblins, Dwarves, Military order knights & now Scots)
Many thanks and best wishes
Valleyboy
From Millsy:
More lovely (is that a thing?) Scots from you mate!
Your muted colour choices perfectly mirror their dour Scottish countenance. These stout lads really look like they mean business. No doubt they would feel perfectly at home in a downpour just like what you are experiencing yourself.
Beautifully photographed as usual too, your stuff is always just so atmospheric Kerry. One day I will make it to NZ and we can have a game in your wonderful space with your beautiful collection.
160 points it is. Hope the weather improves!
Cheers,
Millsy

Great figures and a lot of rain. Hope you are ok
ReplyDeleteCheers Martin, got back late yesterday as one way out had been cleared
DeleteYou've done a cracking job on those MM archers. Hope the wine doesn't run out!
ReplyDeleteThanks Peter, we gave the wine a bit of a hammering and I'll finish off the dregs tonight
DeleteExcellent looking raggedy arsed Scott archers, wet all over it seems!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks Iain
DeleteGreat work Kerry!
ReplyDeleteCheers Greg
DeleteWonderful work, muted, yet enough difference to show individuals. Well done.
ReplyDeleteThanks Bruce
DeleteThat is a wee bit of rain, lad... Fabulous looking miserable Scots (the thing about Scots is that they're good at being miserable anywhere). Question: where did you get those lovely buildings? Keep dry and enjoy your indoor time.
ReplyDeleteCheers Curt, buildings are 3D printed from printable scenery - these are from the "Country" range
DeleteGreat painting!
ReplyDeleteThank you, probably difficult to find a simpler set of figures to paint
DeleteYou have perfectly captured being miserable in the rain as opposed to being home tending your land.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tom, we sat around for 3 days, too wet for golf and fishing, some villages/townships are still cut off
DeleteGreat grotty feel to them, lovely!
ReplyDeletethanks
DeleteThese look great Kerry and with your tones really give the impression of miserable cold and wet archers doing their duty!
ReplyDeleteThanks Christopher its nice not to paint something bright or shiny for a change
ReplyDeleteSuperb once more . Oh the horror of it - cut off with plenty of wine and food …
ReplyDeleteI adore those muted colours!
ReplyDeleteSuper work here Kerry!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant work Kerry. They are really well painted and the setting in the terrain lifts them. Not a bad spot at all to be stuck but I guess that is the same weather that caused the tragedy at the campsite. Hope you’re all safe and sound.
ReplyDeleteExcellent looking Scots, miserable or not.
ReplyDeletePerhaps the damp weather help put you in a Scottish frame of mind. Wonderful work on these simple archers.
ReplyDeleteThese are probably some of the best looking miserable Scots I've seen to date.
ReplyDelete