Enemies for the Drantakh

A few weeks ago Badger Games sent me some figures that I don’t think have been released yet. They referred to them as “heavies.” I think these are meant to be opponents for the Drantakh troops. They sent to packs of snipers. I really like the figures. This weekend I knocked out the eight figures they sent me, and I am pretty happy with the results.

Sniper teams

In the process of painting them, I mixed up the two four-figure packs, so sorry these may not correspond to how they will be released. They look a little like the Gorn in Star Trek.

A closer view of two snipers.

Until there is are more figures in this range, I intend to use them as Drantakh auxiliaries in my science fiction Combat Patrol(TM) games.

The figures have great relief that lends itself to contrast paints or dry brushing. I used both techniques on these figures.

I like the spotter with the scope.
One last shot of the snipers.
For scale, here is a Gorn-like sniper with two Drantakh infantry.

I am sure these have a better name than “Gorn-like” infantry, but I don’t know what it is. Check out Badger’s Web site in general and these figures in particular. Service from Badger has always been first rate.

Completed the Last of the Bad Squiddo Women of WWII Figures

More Women’s Land Army “Land Girls”

I have completed the remainder of the figures I purchased in the Women of WWII Kickstarter. These included more “Land Girls,” “Lumber Jills,” and air crew.

The Sarrisca Precision tractor with the driver (new).
I really like the rat catcher!
Mmmmm. Bacon!
A party of “Lumber Jills” working
Some aircrew figures
I finished these figures a couple of days ago, but finished the spotting device today.

The Germans are in for a fight the next time they attack Little Basely by the Sea in one of my Combat Patrol(TM) Sea Lion games.

WWII Women from Bad Squiddo

I bought into the Bad Squiddo Women of WWII Kickstarter. The figures arrived a few weeks ago, and I immediately filed, based, and primed them. Last weekend I started with the broad dry brushing. Over the week, I finished them up, and tonight I added some foliage to the bases. I really like these figures, and they will make nice additions to my Sealion games.

A unit of armed women ready to defend the town of Little Basely by the Sea.
Sending up a weather balloon.
Signalers.
Military dispatch riders.
Handing over the orders.
Operating a searchlight so the ack ack can shoot down the Hun.
Performing maintenance on machine-guns for aircraft.
Enjoying a short respite.

I also painted five figures from the Pulp Figures Dangerous Dames Kickstarter. This set was the oriental women.

“I’m not bad. I’m just drawn that way.” This was a small toy from Disney World that is in the right scale for gaming.

Now, I will work on some additional Women’s Land Army “Land Girls” the remainder of the week and weekend. Stay tuned…

Feudal Patrol(TM) Play Test and Other Stuff

The weekend started with a play test of Dave Wood’s scenario that will be part of his Roman supplement for Feudal Patrol(TM). The scenario involved groups of Romans attempting to escape after their defeat in the Tutebourg Forest. Other groups had previously escaped, but those in this scenario were straggles. The Germans were defending some fortifications made of logs and foliage.

A picture from an Osprey book of the German defenses.

Most of the players were in Maryland, and none of them were in the same room. Zeb, Chris, Dave, and Greg were Romans and auxiliaries. Duncan and I were the Germans.

A long shot of the table as set up in my gaming room. You can see that previous groups of Romans had left behind some ladders that the Roman straggles would try to use.

As with previous virtual meetings, we facilitated this game using Zoom. I typically provided two camera views. One is from my laptop, and the other is from my phone. This time, I placed the phone on a tripod on a table to get a good overhead view.

The overhead view camera from Chris’ laptop via Zoom. Some of the player were having trouble seeing over the high hedges, so I replaced them with less accurate stone walls to facilitate play.

At the end of turn two, I told Duncan I thought he and I were going to be overwhelmed. A few turns later, after a spirited defense of the gate and the inability of the Romans to get over the hedges in force, the Germans were declared the victors. It was a hard-won victory, and I think everyone enjoyed the game.

After the game, my wife decided that I wanted to take her and my daughter to have dinner at Disney Springs. We had a good sea food meal, but between the drizzle and the requirement to wear a mask everywhere, even outdoors, it was a less than normally enjoyable experience.

Sunday after church I had a chance to do a little more painting and finish up some figures I had started earlier in the week.

Decapod from Antediluvian Miniatures and female adventurer from Star Hat Miniatures.
Crows from Star Hat Miniatures, the avowed enemies of my duck forces.
An obnoxious but lovable alien.
The feared Were Rooster of Romney Marsh. (Star Hat)
The fungus among us: feared mushroom men (Star Hat).

I got a start on a bunch of WWII women from Bad Squiddo. Most are in khaki uniforms, so I am assembly line painting them. I plan to finish them little-by-little this week and next weekend.

Completed two small projects last night

At Cold Wars 2020 Old Glory was handing out a pack of figures that included three Marines and two animals. This vignette is based on a true story about a patrol that was warned of a Japanese ambush. I rushed to the dealer hall to make sure I could get a set. I painted them this week. I couldn’t remember my US Marine “recipe,” so they turned out a little more tan than green, but uniforms fade like crazy in the hot sun.
Sally 4th television and movie characters. These are detectives. My favorite is Miss Marple from the Margaret Rutherford 1970s movies.
A Star Hat Miniatures duck. I painted this at the same time as the Marines and used the same paint scheme. Most of the Star Hat figures are fantasy, but in the recent Kickstarter there was this one “modern” duck. I think I’ll put him with my other science fiction ducks.

D-Day Weekend Hobby Work

Much of Saturday was consumed by a four-player, Zoom-based, virtual play test of Wars of Ozz in the afternoon. The game went well, but Dave’s Munchkins were badly mauled by Chris’ Winkies in the most lopsided outcome we’ve seen with these rules. It was a combination of Dave not realizing that he should try to avoid Melee with Winkies and Dave’s dismal die rolling of Biblical proportions. On the other flank, Zeb and Greg had a very even match between their Gillikins and Quadlings.

A view of the table in Florida from Chris’ screen in Maryland.

After the game, my wife decided that I wanted to take her out to dinner :), so that consumed the rest of the evening. We’ve become big fans of Bonefish Grill. The service is always excellent, and the food is good.

Sunday I had a chance to paint some. Late last week, I had pulled three Eureka Miniatures French Revolution vignettes out of the project box to the painting table. I don’t know if they will ever find their way into a game, but they were fun to paint.

French cantiniere.
Another view. Painting all the tiny separate bits to go in the wagon took much of the day.
Bread makers. I like the woman kneading the dough with her feet.
Another view.
A final view.

The next set were some workers. I am not sure what the women with the sacks are supposed to be doing, but I like the guy sharpening a sword on the big stone.

And then I found this guard post. I have no idea where it came from or why I purchased it, since I already had one, but it was an easy project.

And finally, I painted the last three Marshall Ney figures.

In addition, Saturday morning, I filed and based a much of recently arrived duck figures, some of the Bad Squiddo women of WWII Kickstarter figures, and some figures I received from Badger Games. Look for pictures soon.

Duck!

I recently received my Star Hat Miniatures duck Kickstarter figures. They are great!! I had convince Darcy to offer a sprue of heads that I could put on other bodies. Months ago I had painted a unit of Vikings without heads in anticipation of this day. I also had a unit of dwarfs (Old Glory I think) that were waiting for duck heads. So early, early this morning I finished one of the two units, so here the both are:

Duck heads on dwarf bodies
Duck heads on Viking bodies

I hope to get them on the table soon, but who knows?

Finishing Up the Weekend

As I mentioned, I spent the bulk of the weekend scanning 3000 slides and turning them into digital images to make them easier to watch, edit, sort, etc. This is the setup I used to do that.

It was really fun to look at old picture I hadn’t seen in years. Here is an example of one. The quality of the original was poor, so the scan is also poor.

Gaming in Kurt Cillia’s basement

My wife’s role was to clean the slides while I scanned and uploaded them to my computer. Before she work up each morning, I had a little time to do some painting. I posted pictures of some of my results earlier. After work today, before doing a final edit on the Wars of Ozz(TM) rules to get it ready for the upcoming Kickstarter. I also had time to flock and dull coat these Cossack figures.

Female Cossacks from Old Glory (I think).
Looting Cossacks.
Another view of them.
A final view.

A few conventions ago, the HMGS folks gave out this free figure of Marshall Ney firing the last shot at the end of the long retreat from Moscow. All the HAWKs gave me their figures. This weekend I painted four of seven for my retreat from Moscow skirmish game. I painted them in different color schemes. I figure when they are mixed with all the other figures in that project they won’t be so obviously the same figure. And may one will be Ney.

Will the real Marshall Ney please stand up?

I decided to flock them with my standard earth blend instead of snow. I figure these will work okay on a snow board, but if I covered the bases with snow they wouldn’t look right on a non-snow board.

More Figures Painted

I spent much of the weekend scanning about 3000 slides into digital files, but I did have a little time to do some painting in the early mornings before my wife got up. Here is what I accomplished.

Dr. Who Draconian and Sontaran in 40mm.
Rommel and Monty in the Western Desert.
From the other viewpoint.
Some Mediaeval or Fantasy civilians. I am not sure the manufacturer.
Sally 4th Sailors.
Sally 4th figures inspired by the High Road to China movie.
Pulp Figures woman in sidecar motorcycle from the recent Dangerous Dames Kickstarter.
Same figure, but dismounted.
SciFi cryogenic chambers. These were casualty pods for the ambulance version of the LARC vehicle for ACP 164.
Goblin riding a pteradactyl.
Another view of a goblin riding a pteradactyl.
A wide shot of the goblin riding a pteradactyl.

Tonight I need to wrap up the play test version of Wars of Ozz for the Kickstarter, so I am not sure I’ll complete any figures tonight.

Tanks!

Florida is starting to re-open in a big way, working to get life back to normal, so CINC Domicile is starting to push to get out of the house. The tremendous hobby throughput I have had during the plague panic will be slowing considerably in the next few weeks. But, this weekend, I completed a project that has been languishing for a while: science fiction tanks.

The project actually began many years ago by Greg. He has started to scratch build some GW-like vehicles from extra bits and plasticard. For some reason lost in the mists of time, he didn’t want to finish them, so I ended up with them. This weekend I broke out the plasticard and finished them. I also had a chance to get out the airbrush and do a little camo work; although, I am having a lot of trouble with water in the line, resulting in the occasional spatter of watery paint that screws up the paint job.

I started with some dollar store tanks that come in a bag with green army men. These are roughly M-48 or M-60 looking, but not quite. I cut off the gun and added a Company B Tesla cannon. I had a couple of bits left over from a Pig Iron kit that I used to put some sort of laser gun in the commander’s cupola.

Dollar store tank with Tesla cannon and lasers in the commander’s cupola. The other tanks I had built from dollar store bits, I painted green, so I decided to base this in Africa Corps yellow.
After the airbrush camo, the treads painted black and dry brushed with silver, and some detail painting.
The finished tanks with some Pig Iron infantrymen.
A closer view.

The second project was a smaller APC looking vehicle (I don’t know what it was supposed to be in 40k), but I added a surplus Sherman turret and some additional details. I also had some rockets that I thought would look cool on the sides.

The basic tank/APC/infantry fighting vehicle sprayed yellow.
A frontal look.
A closeup of the current with additional bits from Sally 4th (the ball is from an Albedo LARC), Pig Iron, and Dust.
I don’t know what these rockets are from, but I thought they would look cool on the side of the vehicle.
This decal is from a Korean War M-48 kit. That front armor plating was crying for some sort of decoration.
The finish product with some Pig Iron infantry.
Some Pig Iron commandos emerge from the hexagon rear hatch.

The last tank is really large. Again, I don’t know its intent in GW land, but I plan to use is as a lumber heavy tank or a tank transporter.

The behemoth with the base coat of Africa Corps yellow.
For scale, you see that the other tank fit complete on the top deck.
I had intended this as some sort of fixed defensive position, but it will make a good turret on the large tank.
The “turret” on the behemoth.
Nearly complete (front).
Nearly complete (rear).
Completed model with some female infantry (front).
Completed tank (rear). The back hatch was a leftover piece of a Pig Iron vehicle kit.
The turret removed, the tank makes a good firing platform for space worm infantry.
A closer look at the “turret” as a ground-mounted fixed defensive position.
From the other side.

During the previous week, I had been picking away at the last few figures in my project box. These included some Pulp Figures characters from monster movies.

Dr. Frankenstien, Frankenstein’s monster, and Bride of Frankenstein.
Lycanthropes.
Tiger lady and creepy girl (made more creepy by not painting her irises.
I think these are supposed to be from the Island of Dr. Moreau.
This figure was in the box. I think it must have been a freebie with an order from Pulp. It is clearly sculpted by Bob Murch.

To guaranteed more longevity, I needed to replenish the project boxes. As I’ve mentioned in previous posts, when I get back from a convention I usually immediately file, base, and prime the figures so that they are ready to paint when the muse strikes me or I have a couple of hours to spend. With the monster movie figures, I had pretty much emptied my project boxes, consisting of four 4L Really Useful Boxes. I was poking around and found a box of unpainted, unprepared figures that I must have just thrown in the box to get ready for the move. You can see that stack on the table getting ready to be prepared for painting. This weekend I filed, based, and primed this stack of lead and filled up three Really Useful Boxes. There are some odds and ends, like movie characters from Sally 4th, the recent Pulp Figures “dangerous dames” kickstarter, some dwarves that will eventually get duck heads, some Eureka French Revolution vignettes, and other odds and ends.

It wasn’t as productive a weekend as I would have liked. Next weekend, Friday through Sunday will be consumed with converting slides to digital files. I have about 30 carousels of slides that I have been meaning to convert. I found a place in town that will rent me the equipment to make high quality scans, so I’ll be cleaning slides and putting them into the machine while watching old black and white movies.