Wednesday, 4 March 2026

From TomL: More Legion of Death (25 points)

This is the second Lance of the challenge painted as the Grey Death Legion. This unit has no battalion indicators but we do have more decal skulls!

 


As before, base colors are from the Vallejo Model Air range, while the weathering and weapons were done with Vallejo metal & model colors. The cockpits were finished with Tamiya clear orange.  The tiny death head skull decals are from Fighting Piranha Graphics. 

Score:
25 points for 5 figures

10 Skulls
5 points for the Stompy robots of death duel.

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Sylvain: You are so consistent with the quality of your paint job when painting these robots that I would really like to see a picture of the whole collection, or maybe some robots in action during a game. I love the japanese banner (sashimono) on the back of one of  your robot. It elevate the style of your lance. Bien joué! 

 

 

From AdamC: Riders of Rohan (60 Points)

 

Six Rohirrim from Games Workshop armed with a variety of weapons.

These two are horse archers something Tolkien never mentioned. They have "Good archers in their fashion" according to Legolas. 
Still Jackson had them use these in the movie so I guess it works.  Still its not a weapon set I ever imagined them using. 
These two are armed they way I wish all the riders were armed. The spear, javelin or lance is the weapon for a hose man.
I like that one is throwing and the other is using his as a lance (though I have repaired it twice so maybe not the best grip).
Finally we have two rides with secondary weapons.
We have an axe and a sword. Games Workshop miniature are frustrating, I always feel they should paint up better than they do. The issue may be me not them but I am always a bit disappointed with how they look when I came done. 

Still they are serviceable enough to use. Six mounted 25/28 miniatures which are 10 points each for another 60 to add to the pile.
 
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Sylvain: Ha, the charge of the Rohirrim! Such a great moment of cinema. Your miniatures brings back the magic of the screen just looking at them. Your choice of color is right on. I'm sure your next game with theses horsemen will be as epic as their movie counterparts. Bien joué! 

From BruceR: Guns of March, Desert raiders, some OOP one offs (75 points)

 Hello all:  My 4th challenge I believe and first time painting only one range of miniatures, 10mm.  Why break up a good thing.

First are my Galloper Guns.  After painting the great canons and indicating I would use them with my Dogs of War force, Greg "kindly" pointed out Mini Rat have the actual Galloper Guns.  So, point and click.

So, not the same as Greg's submission, yet similar.  




I painted one unit with green and the other brown to be able to differentiate on the table.







The gabions are an addition and help tart up the base. 



While ordering the galloper guns, who would have thought I would see other items I just needed to have.

Dogs of War Al Muhktar

 agility.    The standard bearer is blind and even at 10mm the ability to 3d print these miniatures is truly amazing.  










I strayed from my usual procedure and base coated in white, as the riders and horse have a majority of white.  I struggled.  They turned out fine, just seemed I kept going back to do something extra.  

I'm currently working on another unit and sticking to my black undercoat and blotch l painting.  Maybe I'll finish them to do a side by side this week.

I did a couple of quick commanders as we were playing a 3 v 3 game and using all the work I've done over the last year.  More commanders needed.

Paymaster and chest.

This is a great miniature from Mini Rat studios with sacks of lire and chests held by the paymaster.  The chest is unique with two burley guards.  






Another little sidetrack is the organizer of the gathering at Adepticon sent out the game pack and it requires a 40x40 camp base.  I quick jumped to the interweb and found great items at Pendraken.  Overseas shipping and timing issues kept me from ordering.  I'll be back for some wee metal lads, wagons and tents.  So, a quick work bench foray with some foam and card.  A hovel is made.  I than turned to the last strip of OOP empire Warmaster commanders I had discovered in the draws of opportunity and quickly turned them out.  These are really great miniatures at this scale.  I'm even claiming 4 skulls, 1 each on the helmet holding the feathers on 2 of the heroes and 2 on the other heroes' hammer.  I worked to allow the base to fit on the camp base to allow the commanders to not include the base in bigger games.  I did attempt an Italian Wars flag as these will be Dogs of War forces.  









Attempted Closeup of skulls holding feathers


Close up of skulls on hammer





Hope you enjoy me wee lads.

As always be safe.

Points:

Galloper Guns 10mm
    4 guns @ 3pts                      =   12
    11 crew @ 1pts                    =    11
    2 Horse @ 1.5pts (no rider) =      3?

Desert Raiders 10mm
    12 cavalry @3 pts                =    36

Paymaster                        
    1 Cavalry @3                        =     3
    2 Infantry                               =     2

Heros 10mm
        4 infantry                           =     4

Total                                          =    71 pts


Skull Duel:  4 pts

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Sylvain: So tiny and so pretty, that's what always come to mind when I look at your freshly painted stuff. Your miniatures are so richly colorful that it's an a constant invitation for the eyes to gaze upon them. I will add 4 points for the large banner and even up your score to 75 points. Bien joué!
 













From HerrRobert: Dragons Dancing at the Black and White Ball (40 points)

Deep in the frozen northern wastes, the young white dragon Othimmalaeagkar stood proudly on a hunk of rock staring out over a frozen sea of ice. Whisps of cold escaped her nostrils as she surveyed the domain she would make hers, establishing a lair and asserting dominance, contemplating the treasure soon to be mined by her captive deep gnomes and hordes of succulent caribou to feast on.

Meanwhile, deep in the fetid swamps hundreds of miles to the south, a young black dragon Thriingaulzundae snorts in deep satisfaction over his acquisition of a ruined and flooded chapel, sacred to gods long gone. Having secured the loyalty of a pirate band and the fealty through fear of a tribe of orcs, he contemplates the riches he is sure to amass, the magic to hoard, and ancient knowledge to covet.

For my third entry to Challenge XVI, I take you on a trip back down memory lane, to the Analogue Hobbies Studio of Challenge XIII. While my progress through the studio was extremely limited, I did amass several projects for the various themes throughout the studio. One of these was the "Black and White" section, which seemed eminently suited to digging something out of the pile of shame.

Black & White: Paint something in grey-scale, with black and white being your colours of choice. Reconjure the elegance of the silver screen! 

What could possibly be more suitable than some chromatic dragons?

From D&D Beyond, we have the necessary descriptors:

Black Dragons: Black dragons dwell in swamps on the frayed edges of civilization. A black dragon’s lair is a dismal cave, grotto, or ruin that is at least partially flooded, providing pools where the dragon rests, and where its victims can ferment. The lair is littered with the acid-pitted bones of previous victims and the fly-ridden carcasses of fresh kills, watched over by crumbling statues. Centipedes, scorpions, and snakes infest the lair, which is filled with the stench of death and decay.

Don't you just love that sense of satisfaction sculpted into his face?

White Dragons: White dragons lair in icy caves and deep subterranean chambers far from the sun. They favor high mountain vales accessible only by flying, caverns in cliff faces, and labyrinthine ice caves in glaciers. White dragons love vertical heights in their caverns, flying up to the ceiling to latch on like bats or slithering down icy crevasses.

Fizban's Treasury of Dragons gives even more options for customizing these antagonists, from a dragon naming table, to lair designs, personality traits, dragon goals and even adventure hooks. 

Both dragons are from Reaper. Othimmalaeagkar is a Reaper Bones Young Ice Dragon, while Thriingaulzundae is a much heftier metal Young Swamp Dragon. Both are multi-part kits, with the wings cast and provided separately, which made things a whole lot easier to paint.

Reaper Bones Young Ice Dragon

The metal swamp dragon

I went with a pretty simple paint scheme for both, which doesn't really befit their status as dragons, but which worked really well. Both were primed and painted in parts, wings painted separately, and only assembled after all basing was complete. For Othimmalaeagkar, I primed her black, then completely covered her in white craft paint, followed by Game Color Blue Wash, and then dry brushed with Mondo Llama Snow Flurry, while her claws and teeth were Mondo Llama Winter Clouds. Mondo Llama craft paints are all a satin finish, which worked well for this dragon.

The base is where I took a lot more risks. I used a Reaper lipped base, and filled it with Realistic Water. I was sadly disappointed since I was unable to get the water to fog up or look like ice the way I wanted it to. Despairing a bit, I turned to AK Interactives Snow Sprinkles to cover the base of the miniature, and Ice Sparkles to try and create the ice effect over the realistic water. I was afraid I almost ruined it by putting watered down mod podge on the base to lock everything in, but when it dried it gave a very nice blending. I'm quite pleased.

For Thriingaulzundae, I used Mondo Llama Fresh Pavement over a brown primer. His scales were picked out by drybrushing Folkart Metallic Black over them, while I used Delta Ceramcoat Charcoal Grey for his skin. His claws are Mondo Llama Misty Grove.

I also used this as an opportunity to experiment with swamp bases. I started with my usual drybrush of Mississippi Mud and Teddy Bear Brown fraft paint, followed by a wash of Ghille Dew speedpaint. More realistic water followed, tinted using Woodland Scenics olive drab and brown tints to the realistic water. At first, I was concerned that I'd poured too much in, but it gave a really great effect of wet ground surging up on to shore. I then added Army Painter Swamp tufts, some Woodland Scenics foliage clumps, and lichen cut and torn to size. 

So there we have it, two young dragons ready to establish themselves in their new territories, and some solid celluloid from back in the vault.

Scoring is a bit difficult. Both models are a bit larger than a mounted 28mm figure, and comparable to an armored car I posted in a previous entry. However, a full 20 points seems a bit much, unless I can eke out 5 points per for the bases, so I'm going to claim 15:

Scoring:

  • 2x 28mm dragons @ 15 points per = 30 points

That puts me at 70% of my very modest 100 points goal, with most of a month to go. I might just make my goal!

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Sylvain: Very nice paint job on these dragons. The work you did on the bases really makes them come alive. The description of your painting method is really instructive. Since I scored 20 points per dragons for my own submission yesterday, it's only fair to grant you the same amount. This will also get you closer to your 100 points target. Bien joué!