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Saturday 28 September 2024

Townspeople

My continuing work on my oddball vignettes has moved onto the civilians.

I ordered four sets of the new Perry Napoleonic civilians. There are another four sets in the range, but regrettably they were out of stock. So another order will need to be placed.

The first batch are the workmen.





The second batch are the townsfolk.



And in their appropriate settings...



This reminds me of an old (very old...I mean 1968) Pink Floyd song Careful with that Axe Eugene

The village comes out to watch the parade




And catch a rare glimpse of the Emperor 




The lead pile is running very low right now, with little chance of replenishment in the near future thanks to some unknown teenager of questionable parentage who threw rocks through two of our windows (and through the neighbours too). The resulting $750 repair bill then the $500 to install some cctv gear has seen my budget for toys diverted for the rest of the year.




Wednesday 25 September 2024

The Pontoon Bridge

As a part of my current rash oddball projects I have made up a pontoon bridge building set.

I have wanted to do something like this for a long time and have eyed that Renedra pontoon bridge since it was first released maybe eight to ten years ago. Well finally I bought one...actually I bought two, because it can be built as just a wooded bridge and I figured I might have a need for one of those, but it will probably just sit unassembled in the spares area for a couple of years.


But the pontoon bridge alone was never going to be satisfactory so I bought the Perry French Napoleonic bridge builders set as well.


You can almost imagine that this shot is taken at a standup at the Grand Armée Annual Conference and the officer is saying "Good morning everyone, my name is Colonel Pivet and I would line to introduce my team: to my left is Captain Delafont, who is on secondment from the staff and whose interests include bridge building, travel, ornithology and cordon blu cooking; to his left is private Arnoux, who is the comedian of our group and likes nothing better than serving up exploding croissants to his teammates..."

I mounted them all on 20mm Renedra plastic bases, carving wooden planking into the bases for the three sappers that will be working on the bridge. The officers were given grassed bases, figuring that they probably would be observing from the bank anyway. The two lads in the water could have been left without bases, but they would likely get lost or damaged so I put some water texturing on the base and let them have a swim.

When put together with the bridge the figures make an impressive scene. Clearly this bridge is being built across the Blue Danube, although it was more brown than blue when I saw it.

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The officers are very happy with everything  and are deciding where to go for coffee.



To further enhance this scene there is a set with a pontoon wagon with four more workers and various pieces of equipment, but sadly it was out of stock when I ordered these so it will have to wait for another time.


Sunday 22 September 2024

French Artillery

The weekend saw the completion of two French Napoleonic gun sets.

The first is a foot gun loading.





The second is a horse gun sighting the piece.




Next up is a pontoon bridge and its construction crew.

Thursday 19 September 2024

Paint Your Wagon

Say the names Lee Marvin and Clint Eastwood and you think of tough guy films like The Dirty Dozen, the Killers, Dog Day, Dirty Harry, Rawhide, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Ungorgiven, or a host of spaghetti westerns of the 1960s. Between them these two actors contributed to more than 240 films or TV shows (and some of those TV shows ran into hundreds of episodes), between 1950 and today. Marvin died in 1987 aged 63, while Eastwood continues to work at 94.

Given their tough guy images I have always found it odd to think that in 1969 the two of them appeared in the musical comedy film Paint Your Wagon. Even stranger for me is that fact that the song from the film "Wand'rin Star" where Marvin sings in this gravelly voice "...I was born under a wand'rin star...", should be a number 1 hit in the UK for three consecutive weeks in March 1970.

What has this to do with wargames, figure painting, making terrain or anything else I usually write about? Well nothing really. I just needed a title for this post and when I thought of Paint Your Wagon it sent me down one of those memory rabbit holes.

What this post is really about is to show this nice French Napoleonic supply wagon that I finished on Monday. I had been looking at this model on the Perry site for some time now and it has been added and removed from my orders half a dozen times. The hull is a nicely detailed resin casting that needed minimal cleaning.





It is fabulously over loaded with all kinds of clutter, trunks, chests, boxes, bags, blanket rolls and no doubt a fair amount of loot.  It comes with a removable cover.






There is a vivandiere and a rather grim faced driver seated at the front. 


This piece will feature at the centre of a game in the not too distant future.