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  • Pine, birch and spruce trees

    Pine, birch and spruce trees

    During the german wargaming convention Tactica 2011 in Hamburg we will show a Flames of war gaming table depicting an Eastern Front scenario. We want to show the area at the Don bow next to Stalingrad. Since the fight took place at the country side we focus on realistic looking trees. These here are the prototypes for our woods. The first tests using Flexibark by Green Scene and MiniNatur tree foliage made us quite happy.

    These trees were made by El Comandante and me and the creation was far quicker than we expected. Using flower wire as a basis with flexibark on top proofed to be very effective. The MiniNatur material is quite expensive but bring outstanding results if you ask me. Especially the pine foliage (called Kiefer in German) is a very effective material and you get a lot of trees out of one box. The Material for the spruce is not that effective, one box was enough for three trees.

    Custom made model birch tree

    Custom made model spruce tree

    Custom made model pine tree

    The painjob was done by priming with brown ArmyPainter Primer, after that I used a mixture consisting of Vallejo Brown Wash and Brown and Black ink. After drying I drybrushed the wood with a lighter brown. That´s it.

    I used foliage in fall colors and green and brown pine foliage which was simply applied with white glue.

  • What I like today #11

    What I like today #11

    Miniature Designers working for their children:
    Tom  Meier designs a miniature inspired by the imagination of his four year old daughter. Priceless!

    Basic Impetus Fantasy:
    A gaming report of a LotR  game using Basic Impetus rules by Geektactica. I am very interested in that ruleset.

    Paintjob by Axebreaker:
    Fow Fallschirmjäger.

    Gaming Table Madness:
    Hughe Spanish Gaming Table. (via Aquarius @ Sweetwater Forum)

    1:72 Ancient Armies:
    Frank Becker shows his ancient 1:72 FoG collection. (german language, excellent pictures)

    Battlefront Article:
    Myths about the polish campaign.

  • Hungarian Recce troops – Csaba and Toldi platoons

    Hungarian Recce troops – Csaba and Toldi platoons

    This week I managed to finish the hungarian Recce troops. Some time ago I mentioned the paper masking airbrushing technic I used to spray the camo scheme. I am very happy with the finished troops. The tanks looks somewhat simple, but I would like to mention some special things in order to let you know how much work these tiny armoured vehicles were.

    First of all every turret was fixed with rare earth magnets to the chassis. Then I added some commanders and one soldier talking to the platoon leader while standing on the rear of the tank. I added at least one piece of stowage to each vehicle. Then I added two typical round aerials which can be seen on many photos showing the Toldi troops. I used wire in a strength which prevents future damage.

    After that I constructed my own Decals. My first attempt with white decal paper was not that precise, so I decided to let them printed out by a service which is able to print white colour, too. To do this we had to provide a pdf with two pages, one with all color information, one with the white information (in black). The Service called Druckeronkel (german page) did an excellent job to reasonable prices. I designed the correct version of the hungarian Balkenkreuz, since I did the same mistake like Battlefront´s author Wayne, who mentioned it in his excellent painting article. Unfortunately I did it wrong with my first batch of hungarian decals.

    Now with the correct version I added registration plates, hungarian coat of arms, hungarian armed forces coat of arms, a double cross insignia for the Cabas, an Eagle insignia for the hatches of the Toldis and some other details. My employee, who is in trainig of a graphical job, did the printig version of the insignia. It takes ages to produce a printable version since you need vector construction skills, knowledge on colors in print (although RGB without profiles was needed) and you should be able to save PDFs. I took us three approaches to get the file right for print. So if you consider to produce your own decals don´t blame me that you did not know that that is hard work.

    For making the fire and smoke markers I used exactly the technic introduced by Elladan in his excellent Fire and Smoke article. Since I read it some years ago I wanted to test that. Strange but true it took me really a long time to get into a pet shop, a artist´s shop, get red ink, a good yellow paint and magnets for the bases. But now it worked excellent, thank you very much Elladan for sharing your work with us!

    The fire and smoke markers will be very important for our upcoming Tactica 2011 gaming table depicting Eastern Front 1943, since many hungarian and sowjet vehicles were destroyed during that time.

  • Wargames Factory renders Orcs depicting an illustration by Angus McBride

    Wargames Factory renders Orcs depicting an illustration by Angus McBride

    Orc Design by Wargames Factory

    Denizens of the dark Wood with Title illustration by Angus McBride

    In the german Sweetwater Forums, I read that Wargames Factory will design orcs. Murphy posteted a picture and DonVoss mentioned that the design reminds him of an Angus McBride Illustration. Wargames Factory notes: “Sculpture by Tim Barry. Artwork by Diego Gisbert Llorens”. Personally I think there is one reference missing: The Illustration from ICE´s Merp Supplement cover “Denizens of the dark wood” by Angus McBride. The illustration by Diego Gisbert Llorens looks very exact like a compositon of two of the orcs on the above cover.

    I always admired Angus McBride and a post on his death was the first Blog Post I ever made. Therefore I would like to see that artists and companies that seek inspirations to mention the origin of the inspiration. For sure Angus McBride was not the first artist to paint orcs like these, but the similarity of the design above is stunning, isn´t it?

  • Fabric based gaming table building by War Artisan

    Fabric based gaming table building by War Artisan

    War Artisan is the designer of several great canvas based gaming tables. Decebalus from the Sweetwater-Forums gave me an excellent reading tipp on War Artisan´s technic. The idea and the result is really stunning. Therefore I urgently recommend to have a look on War Artisans various webpages and picture galleries. Personally I consider to give that technic a try with on gaming board test.

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/war_artisan/sets/72157624371716442/
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/war_artisan/2752049374/in/set-72157606657233854/
    http://www.warartisan.com/gallery2

    A friend of him did post an how-to gallery here:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/36331979@N00/sets/72157610259987470/detail/

  • What I like today #10

    What I like today #10

    Dwarf conversions:
    Lugdhuk shows on La Guerra del Anillo nice dwarv conversions for artillery and command models.

    1:87 Movie inspired Dioramas (tipp by Trollbock):
    No Country for small men by Florian Tremp.

    Diorama:
    Kevin Dallimore shows his excellent Diorama “The Hound”.

    Impetus basing:
    I really love this late Roman cavalry by Ansbachdragoner prepared for the usage with the Ipetus rules.

  • What I like today #9

    What I like today #9

    Photoshopped:
    Russian Fotographer combines WWII Pictures with modern ones. (via Fefes Blog).

    Fallschirmjäger:
    Axebreaker´s new WWII models and thoughts on Camoflage wear.

    Natural wall painting:
    Ellandan´s murals with fencing.

    Basic Impetus gameplay and look:
    Saxon Dog shows this wonderful game pictures on the crusades. This stuff really thrills me!!

  • Grand Fleets – The Battle of the Denmark Strait

    Grand Fleets – The Battle of the Denmark Strait

    When I bought the game Grand Fleets from Majestic Twelve Games I always wanted to replay the famous hunt for the battleship Bismarck. So I bought many World War 2 ships to replay this scenario. My ships are from Hallmark in the 1:6000 scale. I bought them from Magister Militum. On the picture above you can imagine the size of the ships compared to the 5ct coin.

    The German ships

    I was a long time uncertain how to paint the models. I studied a lot websites in the internet to find the correct camouflage pattern for the Bismarck. But the camouflage pattern was mainly grey, so I decided to paint the two ships in the pattern of the testing period in the Baltic Sea. I don’t like Swastika on my models so I tried to paint them in the style of the movie “The Great Dictator” by Charles Chaplin.

    Later I want to replay submarine battles, so I bought a blister of German submarines, too. (This models were not involved in the hunt for the Bismarck)

    The British ships

    I like painting ships with a camouflage pattern and find it more interesting than all grey ships. So I painted the British ships in some of their camouflage patterns, too. Most patterns are from later periods of the war.

    The Game

    Grand Fleets is a very flexible game. It has rulesets for different scale sizes and you can play the game with a hex grid or with measurement tape. I decided to play the game with a measurement tape because it is much easier to find a game board: You just need blue fabric! 😉

    We replayed the Battle of the Denmark Street (Hood, Prince of Wales vs. Bismarck, Prinz Eugen). I was a bit worried because I did not know if the gameplay would work with such few models. But the game is great. You should use the option of simultaneous movement. Both players write their moves on a card and after that move the ships as written down. It is very fun to fool your opponent with an unexpected move into a very good fire position. The game mechanism allows it easy to integrate more players. We played 2 vs. 2 and had a lot of fun. After a good opening for the Bismarck, the two British ships became more than a match for the Germans. After the Bismarck has been sunk the Prinz Eugen startedt two final torpedo attacks on the Hood but the ship became itself sunk. So the two British shops won the battle but were heavily damaged. It was a great game.

    I hope you like my models. In a few weeks I will write a review of the rulebook.

    Greetings Glorfunzel

  • Preparing for the Uryv Bridgehead

    Preparing for the Uryv Bridgehead

    Currently I am working at my Mid War Ostfront hungarian company. At the very beginning of our campaign I will just be able to field a hungarian Tank company as painting an whole infantry company simply takes a lot of time. However my first games will see 7 38t tanks, 3 Panzer IV, 3 Panzer III, 3 Stuka, 2 Nimrod, an motorised infantry platton, and a 10,5 cm artillery battery. The force consists of elements which actually were present during the attacks against the Uryv Bridgehead in 1942 the Sovjets established on the hungarian controlled banks of the river Don. Battlefront did write two good articles on the operation of the Hungarian 1st Armoured Division: Karotyak Bridgehead and The Battles For Uryv. Both give an interesting Overview. Online Ressources for this two Battles are rare, please drop a note if you have more Links for this topic to provide.

    All units I have chosen so far were used in the Uryv Bridgehead. Obviously there were a lot of Pak 36 guns which could not provide an anti tank capacity against the T-34 and KV1 tanks which were brought in the battle by the 30th tank regiment. Since I had some really bad experiences with that kind of anti tank gun, even with the Stielgranate, I do not want to paint this gun type for my Hungarians so far.

    My first army composition feels good against infantry with 10 tanks, 2 armored vehicles with high Rof, a good artillery and aircrafts. However I think my club mates will make the same decision: Let´s start with a tank company – it is less to paint. Therefore I have to think about the threat of some KV1 or T-34. The only tank which is valuable against T-34 are those 3 Panzer IV. That is not that much. The only weapon against the KV1 are my Stukas. Usually I do not like airforce choices since the performance usually is very variable. Sometimes they rock, usually they don´t especially when there are anti aircraft guns available.

    A nice inspiration is an hungarian motorised infantry company painted by flak36.88 in the Battlefront forums. (Login needed).

    To be continued

  • Finished army: My Easterlings

    Finished army: My Easterlings

    Tankred´s LotR Easterling army

    This image in bigger size.

    It´s done, finally. I painted a War of the Ring army for really a long time, now I am really fed up with Easterlings having painted the last Hero Options for this army of Middle Earth. I want to start with this family picture, later on I will write an documentation article on this army on our LotR page. However I am quite happy with the result although I cannot stand the GW plastic bases anymore. The company bases are even worse, therefore I built my own multibasing system.

    Now I can play War of the Ring. I did play twice with this army and was defeated in a really hard way. The magic bullshit with War of the Ring really drives me crazy. Moreover the heroic duell is broken, too. However in this army I have the means to use both, a third Ringwraith was recommended to me. But to be honest, I prefer to play with friends and a few magic (the gathering).

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