Thursday, 16 April 2020

Work in progress

Two posts in a week suggests I need to get out more - but when?

My days currently consist of around 10 hours plus at my desk working and then evenings of a few hours of painting but with complete social isolation in force I have few distractions in the evenings. I have given up watching the news - 10 minutes a day is enough to get what you need before it feels like Groundhog day.  My wife has taken to observing people's studies and lounges - The Health Secretary's study (I assume) looked like the downstairs loo - that is where most of us put old School photos.

Thank you for Classic FM and audio books or the silence would be overwhelming.

My only other comment before reverting to what I was posting about is once this is all over and we have thousands of ventilators in warehouses and enough PPE for every person in the UK, where we will find the thousands of Psychiatric nurses we will need to adjust to normality again?

Work continues on my Napoleonic saga with the Irish Legion just finished and in basing - I put the flags on after varnishing.  These are for the Peninsula - so around 1809 and thus brass buttons and not the silver of 1812 - important detail.

Currently working on a Polish Foot Battery (1812) - guns pretty much done and crews underway.  Preparing the next battery - Wyndhams Rocket Troop at Waterloo.  Using Warlord (my British are all Front Rank and painted by Don) which are a bit smaller but a nice set - had to use the pictures posted on the website to build it - quite straight forward apart from the supporting triangle struts which needed some encouragement to attach to the launcher (actually a ladder).  Need to work out how to paint the guy who is half way up the ladder as he has no base to fix to the holding tin.

All keep safe and well.




Used ipad to take these pictures, appears to be better than the iphone.


Wednesday, 8 April 2020

No shows!

It is a long time since I last posted anything, work, life, whatever.  At this time of the year I would normally be frantically painting the last of the required figures to get ready for Salute and Partizan.  But as both shows have disappeared out of the calendar this year, although we may make Partizan II, my painting has continued at its leisurely pace and I have been able to stick to my routine of trying to push all things along rather than a focus on one area.

My plan, along with the usual gang (Clive, Don, Jeff and Norman) was to present Utitza (1812) at both shows but we are in for Partizan II, if it goes ahead.  otherwise next year (fingers crossed).

However, I have not been idle, nor has poor Don who was painting all of Norman's Russians for Utitza and had managed to finish them, something I had not done with the Poles.

Below are some pictures of recent painting and a general catch up of where I am.  Apologies for picture quality in some cases, i was using an I-phone which are not bad but I do have a habit of getting my finger over the lens.  I will try and get some better shots once able to get outside with decent lighting.

1st Battalion, 2nd Chasseurs a Pied passing a border post - building recently completed by Grand Manner, Perry figures by me.

And a close up of the Head of the column.



Another recent unit was the Zastrow Cuirassiers, ready for storming the Grand Redoubt at Borodino.  The figures are Eureka, some nice detail, especially the badges on the saddle cloths and the helmets.



Then some Young Guard and the Tiralleurs du Po.  All Perry figures.




French 1809 Legere and Swiss.




My focus is very much on the French and their Allies which means someone else is painting the enemies of Napoleon.  That person is Don.  Who has so far completed both Austrian and Prussian armies for me (as well as Russians for Norman) and is now busy wading through British for the Peninsula and now Waterloo.  Don's painting rate far outstrips mine.  He did teach me about 35 years ago but I took his technique a bit far - he says 4 coats for flesh is OTT!

Here are some of the British, finished and put away, waiting for labels and also flags ready for the next lot (including Hanoverians).  With us all locked up, Don is busy painting at home and luckily I delivered another batch of painting just before the lock down was announced.




I will try and keep the posts up to a more regular rate.  Currently finishing a battalion of Irish Legion (1809) before moving onto more Polish (1812) and then will tackle a Rocket Troop (1815).

I wonder how many will be at the first wargame show after the lock down?  What will be the first show - Colours?  It will be packed.

All keep safe and well.