Its been sometime since I posted on this project - the starting link is here
Since April
of last year I have been working my way through almost a thousand 28mm figures
for my Dark Ages project and although I didn’t quite complete all the figure
painting by the New Year – two days later I could finally lay down my brushes.
The Norman Infantry |
This has not been a fun project and there have been plenty of times along the
route where I have cursed and almost cut my losses and sold up. However
perseverance has paid off and I can finally relax. Almost – there is just the
small job of basing these troops.
Some of you might be asking why this was not
a fun project and I think I can distil this down into a couple of simple
statements. The first is that pretty much all the units are the same –
chainmail and more chainmail. To get the randomness of what you want from a
dark age force this means there is no continuity in the clothing (other than
chainmail) so that means every tunic, set of leggings and shield has to be
different for each man standing next to another. The second reason is also very
simple my ambitions were too big – I needed two forces (Saxon & Norman)
that would look sufficiently large enough on my table. To recreate Hastings
(the first game planned) needed a sizeable number of troops (aka units) for at
least three players either side. This roughly meant I needed to create at least
30+ units a side for the [players to command a reasonable number of troops.
I also
rather foolishly decided that no troops would be finished off until all the
figures were painted. This ultimately meant I didn’t see the progress of the
finished article coming to the table until the very end. From a motivational
point of view this was not good and for future projects I’ll go back to my
tried and tested route of finishing off units as a project comes together. So
enough soul searching – lets celebrate the first units to be completed.
In this
post we are going to focus on the Norman Infantry – these have almost all been
sourced from Conquest Games (there are a few Gripping Beast Saxons mixed in
with Kite Shields).
For the great value of £20 you get 44 plastic figures in a
box. Each box contains 8 sprues with five different posed and clothed figures
and two command sprues (each with two figures).
The figures themselves are fine (most see to be advancing) and where there are sufficient kite shields to kit out all the figures there is a rather mixed bag of weapon poses to choose from.Spedifically not enough spears being carried upright.
Rather disappointingly the arms are not interchangeable with the Gripping Beast range. Each main sprue consists of two armoured chaps (one in mail and the other in scale) and three that appear to be in cloth tunics. I decided early on that the armoured boys would be separated from the non armoured chaps to create two distinct types of units.
The figures themselves are fine (most see to be advancing) and where there are sufficient kite shields to kit out all the figures there is a rather mixed bag of weapon poses to choose from.Spedifically not enough spears being carried upright.
Rather disappointingly the arms are not interchangeable with the Gripping Beast range. Each main sprue consists of two armoured chaps (one in mail and the other in scale) and three that appear to be in cloth tunics. I decided early on that the armoured boys would be separated from the non armoured chaps to create two distinct types of units.
All these
figures (as have my entire project) have been based on either 5cm x 5cm mdf
bases or 10cm x 5cm bases (sourced from Warbases) – typically the armoured
units are based in 4’s and 8’s whereas the lighter unarmoured folks are in 4’s
and 7’s. Units size can be adjusted according to the number of bases and can
range from typically 20cm to 30cm frontage. In the pictures below the units are
based on a 25cm frontage with a typical unit containing 24 warriors.
This gives
me some 7 armoured units and 10 unarmoured units. The bases have all been
finished off with sand, static grass and tufts sourced from War Painter on ebay
https://www.ebay.co.uk/str/warpainterscenics
https://www.ebay.co.uk/str/warpainterscenics
Onto the figures...
In the next
post we will look at the Norman and Saxon Cavalry
which can be found here
http://shedwars.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-norman-cavalry.html
which can be found here
http://shedwars.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-norman-cavalry.html
It must be a great relief to finally finish them. Great infantry force :)
ReplyDeletebtw, the "scale mail" is actually gambeson, but it does look quite effective painted as scale
Nicely done. I sympathise with having to paint all that chainmail. I have similar issues with a Second Barons War collection in my lead pile.
ReplyDeleteImpressive.
ReplyDeleteAlways rather liked the Normans, well done!
ReplyDeleteFantastic, your Normans are truly impressive!
ReplyDeleteI am really impressed with how many you got done kudos!
ReplyDeleteThat is an impressive effort in anybody's book!
ReplyDelete