Categories
anglo saxons metal miniatures new additions saxons wargaming

Heft

Wargamers apparently have adopted this word in the realm of figure quality. Metal miniatures with heft matter. The rise of the plastic miniature in 28mm I suspect is the driving force. There have always been metal miniatures – well since the days of H G Wells and the 54mm lead soldier.

There have been plastic figures since the 1960’s, maybe even before that. Plastic has been the 20th century wonder material that is now the 21st century waste problem. So the appearance of plastic soldiers is from a wider phenomenon.

Heft appears to be a popular north american term for weight and so much more expressive I think. So not just “feel the weight of this I just hefted” said the man from Gloucester (UK) but “feel the heft in these” said the man from Philadelphia (USA)?

Apparently metal wargames figures are so much better in metal. I guess they perform better on the gaming board. Mind you plastic figures can be bought in their hundreds for the price of tens of metals, especially those metal figures blessed with detail from all that valuable tin in them. And then of course there is the quote “quantity has a quality all of its own”; was that said by a certain Mr Josef Stalin?

When it comes to books heft no longer applies to the vast swathe of “E” books. Yet in the realm of the printed book there is still room for heft.

Most of my printed books are paperbacks and they do their job well. Then once in a while you acquire something on a different scale.

This then is heft – John Blair’s Building Anglo-Saxon England published by Princeton University Press.

Anglo-Saxon buildings are rare, raring than Romano-British ones. The simple reason is building material. We are back to the plastic waste problem. Maybe just maybe in a hundred years from now all the metal miniatures might have been melted down and reused while dozens of plastic soldiers survive. Unlikely but maybe. Anyway the lover of anglo saxon buildings is frustrated because they all “rotted” away to leave some post holes and thats it. Except John Blair has published a lavish and I mean lavish, book on the buildings of anglo saxon england painstakingly reconstructing for our minds this aspect of dark age britain.

remember dark age britain on this blog means anything between the 4th and 11th centuries.

The book wins the “heft” competition in my collection!

Categories
new additions wargaming

A quick AMW army in 1/72?

On impulse I have gathered a set of figures to build a pictish type army for the british isles dark ages.

So which figures have I chosen?

I looked at the plastic solder review site and did not like any of the pictish figures on offer. So I looked around for something that might work. My main choice has been Orions slavic foot soldiers who would be more used to fighting at Adrianople or in the Balkans against the embryonic East Roman Empire.

The army will use the army choice given in AMW for the Picts – I have added two commands as well
This set was bought for my much stalled stoke field project in 28mm! yes they were too small anyway. I have used some of the javelin and bowmen plus some of the mailed figures for the command bases
These Sarmations were a snap choice when passing through Frome in Somerset. I knew they would come in useful except not for dark age Britain! They provide some mounted troops
Having now bought these figures they are wonderful sculpts. It is unfortunate that the Plastic Soldier Review plays down these figures on account of poor casting and flash. These figures have fantastic detail. They make up my main units for a pictish army

The army will comprise all the options for AMW so thats 12 units but based singley on impetus style 80mm wide bases with no base removal possible.

Neil Thomas and his Ancient and Medieval Warfare (AMW) book has grown on me over the years. At the start I did not think I would like an 8 unit army requiring 32 DBA bases to allow casualty removal. I tried it with single bases and dice and it worked. The breakthrough came with his One Hour Wargames (OHW) using the same technique and reducing the armies to just 6 units but crucially playing many scenarios.

I have played much more of both OHW and AMW than say DBA or my preferred ruleset of Impetus.

I arrived in Neil Thomas’ world by chance. Mike Tittensor wrote an article in Slingshot magazine published by the Society of Ancients (SOA) about bronze age warfare and using Peter Pig’s Bloody Barons ruleset. I bought the rules and these got me into plastics because I wanted a low cost solution. This was my first departure from what had been a preference for 15mm metals DBA gaming on a 600mm square board – an excellent coffee table sized game by the way. By chance I had now the opportunity to return to a dining table or 1800mm x 1200mm type gaming table. I was toying with 28mm but disliked the size of figures from a painting point of view. I had struggled with my Wars of the Roses Perrys figures to get a look I liked.

So it was the peak of the plastics era in the 2000’s and I just bought lots of chariots none of which in the end made it to the painting table – irony in there somewhere.

What I did get was a drift away from DBA gaming, first into Bloody Barons, then Impetus and then Neil Thomas.

Neil Thomas and 1/72 plastics are a perfect way to experiment in wargaming.

Not sure when this army will complete – sunshine and a last push for summer beckons.

Categories
miniatures painting normans in the south wargaming

First Normans in the South Cavalry

These are my first Hat “el cid” 1/72 figures I have painted. Now given the period is pitched as 11th/12th century some of the figures have flat top helmets which mark the start of the great helm era. So my fix as I wanted my figures to back fit into early 11th century was to get some heads from my strelets normans and do a swop. They look ok to me.
I did two Impetus bases and chose my own shield designs which dominate these figures. The horse colours are again coat d’arms which I have quickly become happy with. I suppose the cloaks might seem unusual for early 11th century but I think they work as long as they don’t have heraldic symbols
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_0151.jpg
I used the shield design on the cover of ospreys armies of medieval italian wars, nice work by Mr Rava.
I also get a command unit for the 12 figures you get in a Hat set. These guys were given a shield design based upon one from the osprey guide italian medieval armies 1000-1300. The design shown was apparently the d’hautevilles – a very large family of warriors who were involved in the Norman takeover of southern italy.
I quite liked the design shown on the cover of this osprey so gave a version of it to my command

To round things off I based the figures for 15mm impetus! 80mm wide – a compromise I really like. I used my current favoured 3 layer base painting over budgie grit (warhammer idea) and finished this time with foliage from gaugemaster/noch for railway modelling.

I am pleased with the result.

Categories
anglo saxons miniatures painting wargaming

More Progress with Anglo Saxons

elements of impetus having received their red brown base colour

My anglo saxon army is growing with the addition of many more bases. I am settled on 80mm wide impetus style basing where the idea is to inject a little variety into figure presentation. This is quite easy with strelets who produce a reasonable pose mix with each set they make. In the case of the anglo saxons it gets even better when you buy they big battle sets as I did. The stamford bridge set is the only one currently available though.

Bases have the red brown base coating applied in foreground and plain budgie grit in background

I decorate the base with budgie grit on pva glue (games workshop idea) and use a three colour painting technique. Dark red earth base colour with heavy dry brush of yellow ochre over it followed by a light yellow/white top dry brush. I am looking for sandy and dare I say summer like conditions, no green green grass of home for my troops.

peco grass to the fore and little big man shield transfers

I used some little big man shield transfers for 28mm anglo saxon bucklers on a few of the figures. They blend in ok I think.

I finish with some foliage. In this case I am using Peco Railway scenics which are autumnal or greenish brown grasses.

This unit is actually going to be also the start of my ottonian/lotharingian or very late Carolingians. More about the red/green colours in a later post
although I have not based the figures for shield wall as described in various historical records my anglo saxons still look good en masse.

So thats it for now, next up on show are my first “el cid” Hat 1/72 figures posing as Italo-Normans.

Categories
basing miniatures painting wargames blog wargaming

Nothing Ventured Nothing Gained

There is a blog called “The Waving Flag” blog.vexillia.me.uk. It is run by Martin and from the Vexillia Miniatures stable.

Casting my eye over the blog entries in the 1500 plus wargames blogs site blogs.blogspot.co.uk, I encountered Martins article on super armies for ADLG. Now thats another ruleset I have, like the look of and even played a bit.

Anyhow I noticed his site had some tips and I had a quick browse. And in there was his item on wet pallettes. So it was made in 2016! but so what – the Romans invented pretty much everything we reinvent today including mobile phones of course, not to mention some central american ancient civilisations who had mastered space travel before europe was even dreamt of. Some jesting in there I think.

The point is I have never tried a wet palette – the concept passed me by. I gave it a go and hey presto I got several days out of some acrylic paint I would normal have discarded.

So thank you to Martin at The Waving Flag

The first beneficiaries are my Hatt 1/72 plastics “El Cid” cavalry. More of which in a future post.

Oh and statistically according to Martin there are no super armies in ADLG. So all is well.

Categories
wargaming

Shieldwall

Many years ago, although it seems only recently to me, I bought several titles from the Warhammer Ancient Battles booklist – they included Siege & Conquest – all about the siege; Chariot Wars; the WAB basic rule set itself; The Chinese Warring States and all that plus Shieldwall. A fairly random mix you might say which is correct.

I never really bought into Warhammer or Games Workshop after I returned to wargaming in the late 1990’s. I dropped neatly into 15mm and DBA. The 600mm square tabletop battlefield, relatively small metal mountains that could be painted and a simple ruleset that was popular all fitted my constrained interests and time.

And yet despite plenty of enjoyment 15mm became a compromise and once the restrictions on table size were removed I returned to the idea of 25mm (old style) which I suppose is my roots. Despite buying some 28mm figures that size has failed to ignite my interest.

I have discovered that 20mm/25mm or 1/72 is the figure size that appeals to me: Sufficient in size for each individual warrior, painting repays in the visual look while the table top is of the order 6′ x 4′ or 1.8m x 1.2m which is my limit.

And my 25mm wargaming odyssey has taken me back to the past with 1/72 plastics displacing metals but in the modern style from prolific manufacturers such as Zvezda, Strelets, Hat, Ceasar and the occasional Orion, Mars, Emhar and ok even vintage Revell. But it is not all plastic – tumbling dice miniatures have offered up some really nice figures to compliment the plastics. And so to have SHQ, Newline and Irregular Miniatures.

One thing I have done since returning to the hobby is read and that includes reading rulesets. In fact reading them more than I play them!

You need only one ruleset to play wargames for any one period. So I can’t explain why I have dozens. Yet rulesets are personal statements. In their way they seem to me someones interpretation of history albeit through their take on gaming mechanisms. So they are still history books in a way and thats how I consume them.

I only have historic wargames rulesets – fantasy wargaming is something I left behind in the 1970’s – Sci-Fi I could never get my head round.

And fantasy was for me doing dungeons and dragons in the 1970’s before it all took off. And yet my historical interests have always been tempered by an interest in historical fiction. Not the Sharp novels ilk. More a case of a parallel universe where so much is instantly recognisable yet the story lines, characters, countries have different names.

Each to their own as they say.

Well being inclined to Anglo-Saxons at the moment I dug out the Shieldwall book which I kept because like Chariot Wars it felt like a well researched and back then a well designed package. I never played the WAB ruleset with Shieldwall. Just maybe I might give it a go now.

Of course it is approaching vintage (25 years plus) and oldhammer is probably in the Oxford dictionary as a particular type of old wargamer already.

The constant theme though is to enjoy reading history, enjoy imaginative history and paint miniatures and if with a fair wind play some games. In short it is escapism – taking pleasure in playing with imagination.

Categories
wargaming

Three Tenors Italia 90 Fantasy Map

Yesterday was the 30 year anniversary of the world cup final now remembered more for the three tenors concert?

Back in 1990 being a keen football fan I watched England fail again – the gascoigne era with missed penalties skyed over the bar as I recall.

I don’t seem to remember the three tenors although as I paint my wargames figures to classic fm they are now heard quite often and are easy on the ear.

Yet all was not wasted back in 1990 as during the matches I decided to map my imaginary world. At the time I had just acquired Tony Baths “setting up a wargames campaign” published by wargames research group (wrg). I had run a solo campaign and enjoyed it so much that I decided to expand the small A4 map of hexes.

The end result was lots of football viewing and a very large map of the imaginary world mapped in hexes.

Each hex was colour coded to reflect the categories suggested in Tony Baths book. And I since then it has had quite a few uses although never of itself. I always just made a copy of the part that was being campaigned. So I guess it was my master map.

The important thing was it anchored one view of my imaginary world and it still forms a key part of it 30 years on.

In this world of perfect computer generated images there is something reassuring about its roughness.

Categories
wargaming Wars of Louis XIV

Not just infamy being launched!

As much as I like too fat laddies productions and no doubt infamy will get the thumbs up, other manufacturers and scales are doing business.

Minairons have just dipped their toe in the 1/72 scale market. It is a test of the customer base and unlike kick starters you could say this is a rolling start production even if the roll is barely perceptible to start with.

They have opted for the back end of the baroque, or great northern wars or malburian or as they have called it – the war of the Spanish succession.

Starting with some skirmish troops their low key announcement showed the figures contrasted with the splendid zvezda great northern war swedes.

These look fantastic and very tempting……

Categories
Book Reviews Military History wargaming

Reinforcements 2

Yet more reading matter has arrived for my current flavour – the Anglo Saxons. I should say Anglo-Saxons here is deemed to cover Northumbrians, Mercians, East Anglians, West, East, South Saxons and the men of Kent. And of course their top adversaries – the vikings.

Tom Holland authored Athelstan in penguins monarchs series; Harriet Harvey Wood has chosen Edward the Elder as the focus of “the making of England”; “The age of Athelstan” by Paul Hill is one of his 4 books that look at the world of the anglo saxons; “Cometh the Hour” by Annie Whitehead is a novel about the Mercians.

So currently I have just finished Paul Hills “The Anglo Saxons at War 800 – 1066” and Gareth Willams Osprey No27 Combat series book – “Viking Warrior versus Anglo-Saxon Warrior”.

And there are yet more books for me to read

On impulse I bought this book having read about anglo saxon fortifications in Paul Harris’ anglo saxon warfare 800-1066 – one thing leads to another……
I already had part 1 and my currently parked Normans in the South project must include some stone castles surely?
stretching the boundaries of my self imposed dark age end date of 1100 but again there are some books that I find I cant resist – Medieval Italian warfare being one theme.
At the other end of the period we have the romans. I have enjoyed both authors through their other publications. They seem happy to go out on a limb and it does not hurt to read about contrary thinking when it comes to history or archeaology for that matter.
I like Francis Pryor and this is a book that I have meant to read many times – now I have no excuse.
And wargames rules – well I can’t resist. Another Neil Shuck recommendation. I have read through it and will hopefully give it a go maybe using my dark age armies when they are ready.
strelets 1/72 anglo saxons gathering…..
Categories
wargaming

Carolingians varnished

Made some good progress with my Carolingian cavalry after the PVA primer problems. Even coat d’arms horse colours fell victim to some cracking.

Charlemagne not quite majestic
The horses that plastic soldier review detested
After some care and attention and yes shiny gloss they are beginning to look quite nice
The two light horse I chose actually look ok on their dynamic horses
Another view of the grand national contenders!
If nothing else this set creates motion
I have two heavy cavalry bases for my Carolingian or Frankish army plus a light base from one pack.