Last challenge entry and another
set of problem children here, with an 8 man unit of 28mm Italian
Gendarmes on barded horses for my Italian Wars project. This will
extend my lead in my Renaissance Men side duel with Curt, but not by
enough he pulls off his 32 man Landschneck points bomb. The figures are
of course from the Perry miniatures plastic box sets.
I
started assembling these guys in December, but they kept getting
sidetracked by other projects. The barding proved fiddly and I am still
not happy with it. A horse or two that I was happy with got
requisitioned for commanders etc, etc.
When
it came time for painting there were other issues, mostly between the
chair cushion and the paint brush. The gothic, metal barding was
too...metal, and I had trouble getting the effects right. I did the
other barding as fabric and that proved fiddly too, plus I made the
mistake of using yellow on two of the four sets. Next time I'll try
steel armour with gilded highlights. Not my best Italian Wars unit by
any benchmark, which is a shame as they should be the cream of the crop.
But I'm done fussing over them and am glad to get them out of the
queue.
Originally
I was going to give them the flag for the Sforza Dukes of Milan, but I
didn't think that they were up to snuff for that role. I went with a
generic Cross of St George pennant. The last issue came with basing.
it turns out that I ran out of the plastic Revendra based I was using
for Cavalry, so I had to resort to card. I didn't want to risk heavy
paint and acrylic gel on the card for fear of warping so went back to
older flocking styles, with an eye to rebasing on plastic or wood alter.
I used Static grass with a blend of two army painter boxes and in the
end it doesn't look half bad at all.
I
had a lot of fun on the Challenge and really enjoyed my minion duties
on Monday. As always I've learned a lot and been tempted by a lot of
projects and ranges. Good work everyone, and I'll see you next year.
Another fabulous entry and your Renaissance man duel with Curt was certainly one of my highlights of this year's challenge.
ReplyDeleteThanks Michael. You kept me entertained all Challenge too.
DeleteWell, they look pretty durned good from here. Well done on the whole challenge.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ross. They do look fine on the table. Sometimes I think you get too caught up in the fine detail close up that you lose the big picture.
DeleteWell done Peter - a page out of Vasaris book I see.
ReplyDeleteThanks Conrad. This period does have the best source material!
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