Sunday, January 16, 2011

Carrier Platoon moves to the Front

With the completion of my second rifle platoon, it was now time to work on the Carrier Platoon. For the painting and marking of the vehicles, I had photos of the "real deal', a restored Universal carrier, complete with markings of the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders of Canada, 6th Brigade, 2nd Canadian Infantry Division. When I bought my West Wind Canadians, I also picked up two Universal carriers by Battle Honors. Those were later supplemented by two Bolt Action Miniatures Universal carriers along with enough crew for all four. The BAM carriers came with drivers, but not those from Battle Honors, so I converted two Jeep drivers to carrier drivers by cutting them off at the waist and repositioning the steering wheel. (On a Universal carrier, the steering wheel is vertical.) Here is a photo of the vehicle with the owner, Derk Derrin, and me in front of the Legislature during the Camerons' 100th Anniversary celebration. I managed to get a ride in the vehicle but because it was on the road surface, we didn't really get up to speed. Metal tracks and asphalt/concrete don't mix well. Here is a pic of my cluttered work area. In addition to the photos of Derk's carrier, I was also able to find some pdf files of Canadian vehicle markings on the internet. This proved very useful for producing the tactical symbols for marking the vehicle. In order to paint the crew men, I glued them to Popsicle sticks which makes it easier to handle the figures. The driver and Bren gunner castings are only from the waist up, while the crew that sit in the back are cast from the shins up. It took me a while to get the colour somewhere close to correct. Canadian vehicles were painted a bronze olive colour and I haven't been able to find anything close that is pre-mixed. I do most of my painting with water-based acrylics from the craft store. A 50/50 mixture of FolkArt 449 Olive Green and 945 Maple Syrup seems to come very close. The vehicles with the crooked stars are the original Battle Honors universal carriers, which are inferior to the BAM resin castings. They are about 10% too wide and 5% too short (most of the missing length being forward of the driver's compartment). Here is the completed carrier platoon with all the crew inside and vehicle markings in place. To make the markings, I scanned an image of the symbols and shrunk it to size. I then printed enough off on my laser printer, cut them out with scissors, and glued them on with Weldbond glue. I put a black '5' on a yellow circle on the front right fender (bridge weight rating) and white '68' on maroon square, as well as the a yellow maple leaf on a blue rectangle on both front and back of the vehicle. Not as perfect as decals, but it was a cheap way of doing the markings for the Camerons of Canada. Here is another view from a different angle showing the unit and divisional markings. I am counting these as 20 points towards my personal painting objective for 2011.

Decal fail




More fun with the Imperial Guard touch-ups/updates/etc. After touching up/weathering/adding to my entire collection blue-themed Imperial Guard vehicles, I didn't want to leave out the Valkyrie. Specifically, in addition to adding some weathering, etc I was tempted to apply one of the "eagle" decal sets that I had ordered from Forge World. The decals would replicate the effect seen on the painted example that is stamped on the back of the GW Valkyrie box, which looked really cool (but also like it was done by a pro).

I had used part of one set on the CO's Valkyrie in my Elysian collection, and complexity of the wing features prompted me to stop there. As it was, the Elysian skimmers had a lot of fun markings already, so enough was enough there. The decals looked tricky - they even had instructions on the back of the sheet about how they should be ideally cut up and placed to match the panels on the model as closely as possible. Here is a picture of the instructions for one of the wings:



Feeling chuffed about the progress on the blue guys, thinking about how it might look cool to have that crazy look on at least one model, and deluded that I could somehow match the outcome seen on the Valkyrie box, I figured "Why not try and see what happened?" Oops.

Here are before pictures for comparison:






Here are various after pictures, together with some editorial.







I started on the Valk's right wing first, carefully cut up the decal, and went to work. I SUCK. When the small decal pieces were cut up, they broke very easily, and so the thing became a patchwork. For the left wing, I just threw caution to the wind, thinking that moving the decal as one large piece would be more viable than several small pieces. I SUCK EVEN WORSE AT THAT. It was quite a hash.





All of the decal softener, water etc. was not helping. I still had trouble with silvering too, despite gloss coat etc (I must have messed up something). To make the most of it, I figured I would really, really weather it a lot, and touch up with some white and blue paint here and there. I hope, from a couple feet away, the model looks more like a battle-worn skimmer than something with a bad decal job.



One positive from this project was experimenting with the pigment powders. As Dallas had warned, it's very messy. I used a soot colour around the engines and exhaust. In the end the effect was only subtle (not even sure you can really notice it in the pics) but I really like it and I'm looking forward to practicing more with these powders.

In the end, not my greatest work, but not the end of the world either. And I still think I can figure this out. I have some un-built Valkyrie models left (God love Maelstrom games), and I have three storm trooper squads for just this lonely Valkyrie - can't have that, can we? I am determined to find a way to get this look right, so watch for more lunacy on the blog.

Friday, January 14, 2011

In Trees' Company

In the Wood Elf army, the Treekins are apparently one of the most efficient unit. Efficient = $ in GW's evil plan to get my money ($25 apiece). To further exasperate me, the Treekin models exhale an ugliness I've never seen before. They evoke a pile of dead logs animated by a semi-evil spirit instead of an anthropomorphic tree. But inspired by MikeF's trebuchet and Dallas' fabulous scratchy scratchbuilts, I've decided to build my own Treekins! On the Web, I found that many players do the same, and it could be as simple as picking up twigs in the backyard and gluing on extra Dryads' parts.

For my project, the ingredients would be scenery material. All the tree units in the Wood Elf army are deciduous, so I opted to create a conifer creature.

Two tree trunks tied together with metal wiring make the "skeleton". Extra bits from the Dryads were then added. For the colors, I tried to reproduce the bark of the Japanese Red Pine. Adding the "needles" proved to be tricky. Instructions suggest to simply cover the branches with white glue and dip the tree in a box full of green flock. But to get the look I wanted, I had to glue the bits of flock one by one. Total cost of material to produce 12 Treekins? About $25.

Here is a family picture of the different kinds of tree units enrolled in the army. From left to right:
- GW Treeman
- GW Treekin
- GW Ent
- My Treekin
- GW Dryad
I didn't like the look of the Treeman either, so I bought an Ent from the Lord of the Ring collection to use instead of the official Treeman. I call this fellow "Bob the Birch" (wave back to Bob). Next to the right is "Mama Matsumoto" (the "real pine tree") and "Baby Birch".

These eagles were completed in time for the challenge. The right one is an albino. On the bases, some Brettonian peasants are taking a nap.

These are the last units of my Wood Elf Army. The project is now completed. It's time to work on those Russians.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Come fly the unfriendly skies



The Conscripts are not shy of flyer models for 25-28mm scale - for moderns, we have a Hind helicopter and a Tornado fighter. For SpaceKrieg there is the devestating FuturKom flyer. For WW2, I think there is a Spitfire, Me-109, Yak and some French fighter too.

The flyers are not often seen at our 40k games, however. Dave V's awesome Eldar Nightwing fighter is really the only mainline 40k flyer to have seen action on our gaming tables. The 40k flyer models are tricky to build, hard to mount and expensive to get in the first place. There is already a lot of other stuff to pack into a 1000 point or 1500 point game, so we can generally get by without it.

But with our group, escalation is always a threat (which is great, because it makes us collect more stuff). With the recent appearance of the Da Red Barun, my 40k Rogue Trader Guard will now have to put up with what will surely be devestating, if potentially erratic, strafing runs. Who knows what Dallas will add next for his Tyranids or Nurgle renegades? The risk of fighter/bomber attack was getting too risky for my 40k Imperial Guard armoured column, so I reached into the old "what-was-I-thinking-when-I-ordered-this-crap-six-years-ago?" pile and threw together my Hydra AA tank.

Here are a few pictures, mixed with some editorial:



I have ranted before about Forge World "quality". This conversion kit - acquired at the same time as the alternate Basilisk gun shield - arrived in terrible condition. The cannons were warped, and I didn't think hot water was going to do the job. I also could not find a key part - the deck piece that would hold the turret! It had arrived with the kit, but somehow got lost when we moved to the new house four years ago. And so this went un-built. I figured I might just use the turret for an emplacement or something one day.



About a month ago, the missing piece suddenly turned up during a round of bits rummaging. I was back in business! I just had to figure out the barrels...

Hot water was not doing the trick with the warped cannon barrels, so I had to step it up to the ole' hair dryer. Lucky for me Linda doesn't even flinch when I ask "Where is your hair dryer?" while holding a model kit. I managed to mostly straighten out the damn guns, and I was set.

Or not. Even after all that the frustration was only just starting. Lucky for me I found some curses that seemed to help the superglue hold even stronger. The pieces barely fit the Chimera model kit. There is a narrow but long gap on the decking that I managed to mostly cover only with the help of the track guards, but you can still see part of it...hopefully the dark colours will mostly mask it.

The frustration extended to the painting phase. With the Forge World resin models, I use two coats as a base - Tremclad primer, and then Krylon flat black. I'm not sure what went wrong, but on the resin deck piece, the primer stuck fine, but the Krylon sort of krinkled, like a lizard's skin. I mitigated this with "strategic" dryburshing, and most of this happened on the deck piece, which is covered by the big quad gun turret, so fortunately it is not much of an issue.




The new tank received the blue coat, decals and weathering/rusting last night. Now my Imperial Guardsmen can get a bit of cover from air attack. Also, like all AA tanks, the Hydra looks to be great fun against ground targets too. As a newly painted miniature, it will be doomed in its first game, but after that I hope it will claim many enemy flyers - not mention chewing up a few Tyranids on the ground!

With this, my Imperial Guard revamp is pretty close to done. I think I will update the decals on my "blue" Valkyrie, and may edit a few other things on some models before putting these guys down for now, but it's been fun to revamp some old stuff and finish some way, way overdue pending projects.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Reinforcements for the 2nd Canadian Division

The painting competition is quickly becoming a distant memory [This happens a lot when you get to my age, regardless of how recent the event] and I ended up so far behind the pack that the leaders were but specks on the horizon, rapidly increasing the distance between me and them. I am hoping to achieve a personal goal of increasing my painting output for the year 2011 and by December 31st have at least one miniature painted for every day of the year. 28 down, 337 to go. Several years ago I picked up some West Wind WW2 Brits/Canadians [part of their "Berlin or Bust" range - http://www.westwindproductions.co.uk/catalog/index.php?cPath=3_67] which I painted up to represent the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders of Canada. Since then I have acquired some Bolt Action and Crusader miniatures to add a second rifle platoon as well as some heavy weapons. Only the heavy weapons (PIAT's, mortars and heavy machine guns) got completed in time for the Fall Painting competition, but the rest of rifle sections have now moved off the assembly line and are marching to the front. Next up is the 6-pounder anti-tank gun and a carrier platoon of 4 Universal carriers. The heavy weapons teams are mostly by Crusader with the exception of the Vickers HMG on the front left, which is by Bolt Action. The second rifle platoon is now complete with Bren gun teams [front right] A close-up of some the section commanders, armed with Sten guns.

Improved community outreach for 40k Guard



While I went through the project to upgrade/re-decal/weather my 40k Imperial Guard tanks, I found a little gem in the pending pile - a Basilisk, complete with the an alternate gun shield from Forgeworld (Vannheim pattern or something). I think I first got that thing like six years ago...another example of my lack of focus.

Anyway, the thing had been assembled, and was primed. At one point, it was going to join the Gün Schwarm lineup, but they have plenty of tanks and heavy guns for now. So last night it joined the Imperial Guard armoured column instead! Here are some pictures:






The artillery crew are old figures that I had painted about two years ago...their colours don't match the rest of the collection (maybe I was thinking artillery crews would have a different colour uniform? who knows?) but I'm glad they have a gun to work now.

I like this version of the Basilisk as it brings to mind the various improvised tank destroyers seen in WW2. To keep the flavour, I put the gun at near-zero elevation - I imagine the Guardsmen bringing this sucker forward to direct-fire right at enemy forces in buildings/bunkers/community centres etc.

As far as I know, rules-wise this thing simply counts as a Basilisk - I don't think there were special rules for this variant of the gun shield. But it's good that the Guardsmen will have some artillery fire to back them up.

One new vehicle left on this project - stay tuned for updates...

Minor tweak to retro Guardsmen

A couple of updates from the ongoing 40k Imperial Guard cleanup/improvmeent - a minor one first. My "retro" force of Rogue Trader guys were painted about five years ago. I modified old Lascannons to be absurdly large so they would fit in with other "current" heavy weapons, but they were still based individually.

Eventually, the rules 40k changed to mandate that heavy weapons for the guard are all two-man teams. I hate that rule, but whatever - it is what it is, and I am thinking that it was time the Rogue Trader guys were "legalized", so I popped guys off their old bases and re-based them as two-man teams.





Now they will be ready to rumble "legally" - perhaps during an approaching Apocalypse game?