Monday, January 4, 2010

Sash and Saber 28mm Confederate Infantry

Here are my completed Confederate infantry regiments for Guns at Gettysburg. All figures are Sash and Saber. With 40 different poses in their marching regiments, I was able to field two varieties of 20 man regiments with no duplicate poses.






I have five each of these regiments, for a total of ten regiments in all. That's 200 close-order infantry to go with the 40 skirmishers I already painted.





I'm very happy with the Sash and Saber figures. I researched this project thoroughly before I ever started it, and I thought the S&S line really had the look I wanted. By keeping to a palette of grays, browns, and butternuts, I was able to get the motley look of rebel infantry while not going overboard with weird colors.

Basing Rebs

This past Saturday my wife worked while I stayed home with the boy. While Jack has given up his afternoon nap, I'm still able to get some hobby work done while he plays.

Our house has a pretty open floor plan, with kitchen, dining room, and breakfast nook all in one big area. We put up a baby gate to block this area from the rest of the house, and we keep all Jack's toys in there. He can play while I work on the island and watch him. Saturday I based up all 160 Confederate infantry while Jack prepared food in his toy kitchen.

Materials

I cleaned the edges of 40 Litko bases with a paper towel and a little warm water. I had been storing the painted figures 10 to a popsicle stick.



Sorting

I broke the figures off their storage sticks and arranged them for basing. I had 32 poses, which made for eight different groups of four poses each. Each group would make for five bases. I tried to vary hat styles, blanket rolls v. backpacks, and uniforms' color schemes on each base.



Gluing

I put out five bases for each group, then put four Elmer's Glue All beads on each base. I worked in groups of ten bases to keep the glue from getting too tacky.


Basing Complete!

It took about 20 minutes to get to this point. Then I had to walk away for a couple of hours to let the glue set.


Base Edging

After the glue was fairly dry, I painted the base edges with brown iron oxide paint. I know a lot of people like to leave their Litko base edges alone, but I think they look better painted.



Flocking

I painted each base in spice brown, then gave it a swirl through the medium brown ballast while the paint was still wet. This is the most time consuming step of all, taking about a half hour to complete.




Sealing

Once the paint is dry, I gave each base an Elmer's glue wash. This keeps the ballast from scattering each time the stand is handled. It also gives me a firmer surface on which to apply a light chocolate drybrush, highlighting the base and giving it a nice dirt effect.



Static Grass

The last step is to apply static grass. I use slightly diluted Elmer's glue, hitting various spots around the base. Then I swirl the base through my static grass bowl, tap off the excess, blow off any remains, and set the figures aside to dry.

All told, I spent about two hours on Saturday basing 160 figures. Economy of scale, gentlemen. It's the only way to finish large armies quickly.


Thursday, December 31, 2009

2009 Retrospective

Painting

I had a tough time getting started in 2009, but I finished strong. What with taking care of my young son, making time for other family in town, my volunteer work, and my music, it's always easy to find reasons not to paint. I probably did that too much at the beginning of the year. By the late summer I was striking a better balance between my hobby and everything else.

Counting mounted men as two figures, I finished 1,874 figures this year. For comparison's sake, last year I painted 2,167 figures, and that was after losing two months to hand surgery and losing a lot of production when my son was first born.

I'm definitely settling into a few periods: classical antiquity, the American Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, and the American Civil War. For the first time, I painted NO World War II figures.

1:1200 Figures for Me (1 Ship)
1:1200 Napoleonic British, 1 frigate

When Warhammer released Trafalgar, the fellows and I decided we would build some fleets. A little experience with the fiddly ships and a little experience with the cheesy rules was enough for us. This project is likely to remain unfinished until we find some rules we like better.

15mm Figures for Me (261 foot, 12 horse)
15mm Napoleonic Austrians, 152 infantry
15mm Napoleonic British, 24 infantrymen
15mm ACW Union: 85 infantrymen, 12 cavalrymen

For the first time, I really wasn't motivated to paint too many 15mm figures this year. Usually this is my gaming scale of choice, but I shifted to mostly 28mm figures in 2009.

I expect that I'll be painting a bunch more 15mm ACW in early 2010. Austin, Don, and I are going to give Regimental Fire and Fury a whirl, and we've decided that the infantry need to have shallower bases to give the game the right look. I have 250 infantrymen on order and will probably start them in January. If we enjoy the rules enough, I'll probably get cranking on some cavalry, artillery, and generals to match the new basing scheme.

I had hoped to complete my 15mm Napoleonic Austrian army in time for the bicentennial of Wagram, but I made very little headway. I hope to get this stalled project started again, but honestly, I just have other priorities right now. Still, I'm about 80% finished, and I should probably put my nose to the grindstone for a couple of months and finish that army.

15mm Figures for Commissions (356 foot, 105 horse, 6 elephants, 2 artillery pieces)
15mm Romans, 104 infantrymen
15mm Turks, 40 infantrymen, 30 cavalry
15mm Macedonians, 124 infantrymen, 2 charioteers, 47 cavalrymen, 2 artillery pieces
15mm Carthaginians, 68 infantry, 28 cavalry, 6 elephants with 18 crew

Much of the first half of the year was taken up with commission work. My idea was to make my hobby fund itself. I would take enough commission work each month to pay for that month's purchases, and after I finished painting for others, I would paint for myself. I charged $3.50 per foot figure and $6.50 per mounted figure, so I did earn just over $2,000 by painting. Much of the money went to my new terrain setup, but most of it ended up just paying the bills.

Unfortunately, my theory was sounder than my practice. I had trouble motivating myself to keep painting, and my production slowed to a crawl for a while. I finally decided in June to stop taking new commissions and focus on painting for myself.

28mm Figures for Me (823 foot, 56 horse, 7 guns)
28mm Greeks, 28 hoplites
28mm Macedonians, 112 infantrymen, 30 cavalrymen
28mm Gauls, 38 infantrymen, 14 cavalrymen
28mm Carthaginians, 18 infantrymen, 1 cavalryman
28mm Marian Romans, 82 infantrymen
28mm Napoleonic French, 36 infantrymen
28mm Napoleonic Austrians, 11 infantrymen
28mm AWI Americans, 221 infantrymen, 1 gun, 4 crew, 6 horsemen
28mm AWI British, 8 infantrymen
28mm ACW Confederates, 240 infantrymen, 6 guns, 20 gunners
28mm ACW Union, 5 mounted generals

I started and finished two 28mm armies this year, Macedonians for Warhammer Ancient Battles and AWI Continentals for British Grenadier! No doubt I'll continue to add to these armies, but it was nice to have a couple of small, manageable projects that I could finish within a few months.

After ignoring my pile of unpainted 28mm ACW lead for most of the year, I was able to really crank out the figures in the second half. All of my Confederate infantry are finished now. I still have 40 Union skirmishers to finish, as well as all my Union gunners, most of the guns for both sides, mounted and dismounted cavalry, and Confederate generals. I have a feeling 2010 will see me finish up these armies, finally finishing the project three years after I started it.

I've continued work on my WAB and FoG armies, and while these projects will likely never end (at least not until I die or find other rules), I do plan to finish enough FoG bases to play a proper 28mm game with the rules in 2010.

28mm Figures for Commissions (36 foot, 18 horse)
28mm El Cid Spanish, 8 infantrymen
28mm Medieval English, 18 cavalrymen
28mm Napoleonic Bavarians, 16 infantrymen
28mm Napoleonic French, 12 infantrymen

Only the medieval English were a paying job. The other figures were all samples from HäT Industries. I was glad to paint the figures for them, but these will probably never see my gaming table (except just possibly for the Bavarians).

1/35 Models for Me
Tamiya King Tiger, built and painted
Tamiya Panzer IIIL, built
Dragon Panther D, built and partly painted
Tamiya SU-122, mostly built

With the help of Austin, Don, and Scott R., who are all much better at this than I am, I revisited a hobby that I had given up after high school, building scale armor models. I learned to use an airbrush, experimented with washes until I got them right (or as right as I'm likely to get them), bought reference materials galore, and actually entered my King Tiger in a show, where I received a bronze ribbon. Now that I have a spray booth, I'll be able to paint year round, not just when it's warm enough in my garage. The best thing is that building models doesn't cut into my miniatures time, because I can build on the kitchen counter while my son plays.

Gaming
Once again, our little gaming group was able to keep to a fairly regular schedule. Jon, Austin, and I meet once each month for a painting night and once each month for a game. Don and Scott R. are becoming frequent gaming partners as well, making the 2.5 hour drive about every other month.

After our experience at the local gaming convention in 2008, an experience that none of us particularly relished, we decided to hold our own "convention," three days of gaming over a long weekend in October. We played four games in those three days and had a great time.

In 2009 we played:
10mm ACW with Jon's adaptation of Republique
15mm ACW Fire and Fury
28mm ancients with WAB
28mm ECW with Ironsides
15mm Napoleonics with Republique and Age of Eagles
28mm Napoleonics with Jon's adaptation of Ironsides, Piquet: Field of Battle, and Rank and File
15mm World War II with Battlefront: WWII and 1943
1:1200 Napoleonic naval battles with Trafalgar
15mm AWI with British Grenadier! and Jon's adaptation of Ironsides

December Painting Totals

Even with Christmas sucking a lot of time away from me, December was a very productive month. Here's what I finished:

15mm Napoleonic British, 24 infantrymen
15mm ACW Union, 85 infantrymen
28mm Ancient Spanish, 18 infantrymen
28mm Ancient Gauls, 32 infantrymen
28mm AWI Continentals, 9 infantrymen, 1 general
28mm ACW Confederates, 60 infantrymen

Every figure except the AWI and the last 20 Confederates have been on the blog. That's 667 SPPs for the month, and . . . I'm retiring the SPPs. It was a good idea that got a little silly.

I wanted a way to distinguish between painting, say, one basic 15mm ACW Union figure and one super detailed 28mm ancient Gaul figure. This month I cranked out 85 15mm ACW Union figures in three days without any problem, while I sweated over 32 28mm Gauls for 10 days. I guess if they're all on the blog, there's no real reason to weight my production. You can see for yourself what standard they're painted to.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Even More 28mm Confederates!

Another two days, another 20 rebs. I finally got the butternut color I wanted for the coats, and by mixing some tan with grey, I was able to get a butternut-like color for the trousers.





Just 20 figures to go, and I can start basing my rebel infantry!

Sunday, December 27, 2009

More 28mm Confederates

The latest off the painting bench are some Sash and Saber 28mm Confederate infantry. These 20 figures bring my total to 120, leaving 40 figures to paint before I can base the whole lot.

My other figures were painted almost entirely in gray jackets, so I decided to do these last 60 men almost entirely in butternut. These figures' jackets ended up a little grayer than I would have liked.





So here are the 120 figures, waiting for basing . . .




And here are the remaining 40 figures. Their hats and hair are already done.