Wednesday 14 August 2019

Robert Dunlop

Hugely interesting chat with Robert Dunlop tonight for the podcast.

Robert has done an awful lot to bring the Great War to life on the tabletop. His mega games at the Joy of Six are hugely inspirational. I heartily recommend that you head over without delay to his  Great War Spearhead website to check out the fantastic pictures of his games over the years.

As a taster check out this image of his recreation of the battle of the Somme from 2016.


Robert gives an insight in his inspiration, how he buids the games and how he paints and collects the thousands of figures he uses in his games.

The podcast episode should be up early next week.

Tuesday 13 August 2019

Just Do It!

How many times do you have a fit of enthusiasm for some hobby time, only to it down and suddenly all of your mojo flitters away leaving you sat slumped shouldered and fed up?

What about when the 'new shiny' syndrome hits and figures are bought at a show. You rush home full of expectation, sit at your hobby desk, only to find  yesterdays project sitting in the way. So you clear that away to make room, promising to yourself that you'll get back to it later. Several years later you find that long forgotten project in the dark recesses of your cupboard, unloved and unwanted.

Or, you sit down wanting to crack on with a new painting technique you've just read about on the internet only to find either you have no figures prepped for painting, or that they are undercoated in white and the new technique calls for zenithal highlighting over a black undercoat.

Then there's that time when your enthusiasm is positively spilling over. You've got a clean jar of water. Paper towel to the side. A new fangled wet palette to try out. Your figures primed 'on trend'. Your brushes have a perfect tip that will be perfect for the smallest detail. This is it! Your ready to crack on with your British for your long dreamt of Napoleonic project.

 Now, where's that bottle of Scarlet from Vallejo. A rummage through your paints finds Pure Red. No. Not right at all. Carmine Red? Too light. Cavalry Brown? No, that's from when you were painting in the Dallimore way. You're a basecoat and wash man now. Blood Angels Red? Don't be daft, you're a serious historical gamer. Ah, there it is. Scarlet Red. You give it a shake. Mmmm. Doesn't seem like there's much in the bottle. You squirt out a mixture of air bubbles and that creamy medium with a spot of red in it. Never mind, you know you bought a new bottle at the last show. But where is it?

3 hours later, you've given up and gone back downstairs in a huff to read the latest polemic on TMP.

My advice? Just get on with it. Those figures aren't going to paint themselves. 10 minutes a day yields suprising results. And if you cant find your Scarlet Red, well, Blood Angels Red is pretty close and you're going to splash Nut Brown all over it anyway - so Just Do It!

More soon...and remember, keep talking about six.

Friday 9 August 2019

Episode 2 with Peter Riley, talking the Little Bighorn.


God's Own Scale Episode 2 is now out and available on all good podcast apps. It should appear over to the right hand side very soon.

A nice chat with Peter Riley (rules writer extrordinaire) about his award winning Battle of the Little Bighorn game.

Enjoy!

Monday 5 August 2019

Project Updates.

A quick post to update on my 6mm porjects for the rest of this year (subject to change at a moments notice of course!)

1. Thiepval

This remains in the purchasing, research and ideas phase. I don't anticipate the actual painting or construction phase to start until the autumn. I have plenty of thoughts around how to represent the wire, woods, the elevations and the trenches. I'm actually picking up the trenches this week from Timecast having had the email that they were ready whilst I was away on holiday.

2. Antietam

The figures will be collected at The Other Partizan. Painting for this project will start failry soon towards the end of August and I anticipate that they will be done fairly quickly once I get going. Given the opportunity of a couple of full days, I think I could make sterling progress. To actually get the game on the table, I am aiming for the end of the year. However, I do intend to play a couple of the smaller battles as I go. Certainly 1st Bull Run should be playable pretty quickly.

3. The Alma

Using War Against Russia, and Irregular Miniatures, this is nearly ready!. Just artillery and officers to be painted. Interestingly, the board for the scenarios in the rules covering all of the major actions, is 22" x 16". This is roughly the same size as a cork notice board, which I shall be using to construct a dedicated board for the game. Apologies for the rather poor picture of the painted foot figures.


4. 1809 Austrian Napoleonics.

This is my joint project with Ade. I've painted one unit as a test and intend to crack on with the rest over the next few weeks. At The Other Partizan I'll probably pick up some Austrian infantry in helmets which were still in use in 1809 as well as a bit more cavalry. More on this very soon.

And that's it....





Actually no. No, it's not.

5. Whilst in Ypres, I was inspired to look at the Mons scenario from the Great War Spearhead 2 rulebook. Okay, Ypres, isn't close to Mons, but Mons is the first major enagagment for the B.E.F. With the figures for this battle, I'll be able to do the retreat to the Marne, 1st Ypres and maybe even into early 1915, with Loos. So, on impulse, whilst away enjoying the lovely wines and food of the Rhineland Palatinate, I ordered the figures for the the Mons scenario which will also be collected at the Other Partizan.

So that really is it. A major problem in the past has been overwhelming myself with too many projects and amassing a lead pile of shame. I think what I have in the list above is manageable, with short term and long term projects that I hope to progress to a conclusion within the time periods specified. That's not to say there aren't other projects that are on my mind. ECW, Punic Wars, WW2, Spanish Succssion, WotR and Zulu Wars are all on the agenda. But, I'll resist any purchase or serious thought until major progres is made on the above 5 projects.

Yeah, right....!

More soon...

I can't possibly paint anything so BIG!

The common refrain often heard about 6mm, and often repeated by Peter Berry is the comment "I can't possibly paint anything so small". It might be felt that at times this attitude is at times somewhat apocryphal, if it wasn't for it being repeated across social media, forums and in conversation with the unenlightened.

Only yesterday I read a post on Twitter about somebody complaining about failing eyesight and the impossibility of painting anything smaller than 28mm. To this, I would say 'Hogwash, poppycock and buncum'. I'll reverse the phrase and suggest 'I can't possibly paint anything so BIG!'. Stick with me for a moment.

Unless your primary enjoyment is painting  buttons, lapels and cross belts, this hobby is about playing with toy soldiers. Wargaming encompasses many disciplines whether that be painting, research, making scenery or rolling dice. But to my mind, the principle goal is to actually play with your toy soldiers, either recreating historical battles or playing plausible games in your chosen period in a fictional setting.

I went to a show in Reading 10 years or so ago. There was a magnificent display game refighting the Battle of Blenhiem in 28mm. Thousands of figures from flank to flank on a table at least 16 foot long. Really very nice. But it wasn't a game, more of a static display. And how long must it have taken the players to paint it all up - never mind the scenery. I was led to believe that the figures were painted by just one or two of the players at the table. As a veteran gamer, the very thought of the effort to put on such a mammoth game made my head hurt. But what about the newcomer to the hobby? I imagine, that although aspirational, the newcomer would think 'blimey, I couldn't paint all that...and how much to buy all of the figures?"

I'm not bashing the larger scales here. There are some fantastic displays at shows up and down the country and the magazines are full of them. But, goodness me. The larger scales aren't the be all and end all of the hobby, despite what the hobby press and most shows might seem to suggest.

Lets take a pretty standard unit of 24 British figures for the War of Spanish Succession. In 28mm, to paint them to a tabletop standard - ignoring buttons, but getting the colour where it needs to go might take at least 3 painting sessions of maybe 2-3 hours. I haven't hard evidence of this but I reckon I could paint 8 figures in a session. That may be optimistic, and they certainly wouldn't be figures that would withstand close scrutiny. But I think I could do it. This works out at least 15 minutes per figure, but in reality would be closer to 20 minutes with no highlighting; at most a basecoat and a wash. So lets settle on 3 hours per night totalling 9 hours to paint 1 unit of 24 figures.

Compare and contrast, dear reader, with the same unit in 6mm. Arguably painted to the same level - basecoat and wash. There are two or three methods for painting 6mm to a good standard. Peter Berry published a guide on the Baccus website link here using a black undercoat. He estimates that his method works out at 2 minutes per figure using a production line method. Another method is to spray the figure the principle colour - red, blue, grey or whatever, block in the detail and then wash with a dark brown ink whether that be the Army Painter range, those GW washes or even artists inks from Windsor and Newton. I have used this method previously and would estimate a similar amount of time per figure as the black undercoat method.

So, at 2 minutes per figure, my maths works that out at 48 minutes per unit. In the time it takes to paint your 28mm unit, you can paint at least 11 units of 6mm figures. And I have to say to paint your 28mm unit in that time, you're probably not going to be running around showing them off as your best painted figures ever. Probably. Of course someone may prove me wrong on this and knock out an award winning unit in an hour. But I doubt it!

Over the course of a month of painting your 6mm figures, I'd hazard a guess that you could paint the best part of an army for a small to medium game. In 28mm, you might manage 3 units. Not quite enough to play with. Maybe 6 months later, you might get those figures on the table. Returning to an earlier point, if painting the buttons, lapels and crossbelts in 3 shades, I doubt you'd get that far.

Now, if painting is your main pleasure with a game once in a blue moon, then that's fine. As I've said before, and I say again, this hobby is a broad church with room for us all. However, if you've just come into the hobby looking to fight your first battle on the dining room table, then 6mm is an excellent choice. If you're an Ancients gamer there are many great ranges, but the handily produced boxed armies available from Rapier here make getting a game on your table quickly very easy.

Take for example their Republican Romans which for £14.50 you get:
  • 1 Mounted General
  • 3 x 54 Hastati / Princeps
  • 1 x 54 Triarri
  • 1 x 24 Velites
  • 1 x 18 Heavy Cavalry
240 foot figures and 19 mounted. At 2 minutes per figure that works out at around 9 hours painting, allowing  more for the mounted.

How about some Carthaginians to oppose them: 
  • Mounted Command
  • 2 x 54 Infantry (African & Spanish)
  • 1 x 36 Gallic Infantry
  • 2 x 24 Skirmishers
  • 1 x 18 Punic Heavy Cavalry
  • 1 x 15 Spanish Light Cavalry
  • 1 x 12 Numidian Cavalry
192 foot figures and 46 mounted figures. Again I would think 9 hours would get these done. So 18 hours work and you have two small armies within a months work at most to play a game. Try that in 28mm.

So, I ask you, how can you possibly paint anything so BIG!