The random thoughts of an ancient wargamer. Featuring rules, battle reports, and all sorts of miscellaneous wargaming (and other) topics.
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Sunday, 30 November 2008
Friday, 28 November 2008
Table Top Battles - Making the Table Top
At first I thought of using a cloth, but I have found from bitter experience that trying to draw a grid on a cloth is not the easiest of things to do. I then looked around for some suitable wood, but a trip to my local DIY store soon showed me that:
- This was an expensive option
- It would produce a heavy playing board
- The resultant playing board would be difficult to store in what my wife calls my 'toy room' (i.e. my wargames room)
In the end I remembered that some years ago I bought some of the last remaining stock of Jigwar terrain boards from Essex Miniatures. These are 30cm x 30cm squares of 5mm thick plastic that were cut so that they clipped together (like a jigsaw puzzle). I still have a enough unpainted squares to make both a land and sea 'Table Top'.
The plastic is thick enough to be rigid, and light enough (and thin enough) to store easily. It will also 'take' acrylic paint very well. All I need to do is remove the protective film covering from the squares, clean them, give them a couple of coats of paint, make out the grid and ... voila ... I can try the rules in earnest.
Tuesday, 25 November 2008
Table Top Battles - A great impulse buy
I am a great lover of small, simple games - particularly if they can be played solo - and this has all these qualities. The rules are very flexible and can be adapted for a variety of different periods, and can allow a series of battles to be fought in a matter of a few hours. They have also been developed over a long period of time, and although they are not 'rules lawyer' proof (no wargames rules ever are!), they do cover almost everything that one needs (including naval warfare, air warfare, and campaigns).
Having read these rules I can see me using them - with minor alterations - for all sorts of small wargames projects ... including my 1930s Lauranian campaign.
Saturday, 22 November 2008
Warfare 2008
There were lots of traders, and I could have spent a lot on money ... but I was sensible and mostly bought what I planned or had thought about buying:
- A box of Hexon II Desert terrain and related terrain features
- Some vehicles from Minimi Miniatures
- C S Grant's THE WAR GAME COMPANION (it has had some good reviews, and having seen it in on the Caliver Books stand I decided to buy it)
- Stuart Asquith's WAR IN THE SUDAN 1884-1898 A CAMPAIGN GUIDE
Friday, 21 November 2008
Lauranian Air Force - Yet more problems!
This time I used a spray can of acrylic undercoat from a manufacturer whose products I have used before. I cleaned the models by washing them in a mild solution of soapy water to make sure there was no oil or other residue on the surface, and when they were thoroughly dry I sprayed the top of the models. I then left the paint to dry before turning them over.
This time the plastic did not react with the paint ... but the paint that was already on the models had begun to crackle and bubble during the drying process. This suggests that the original paint is probably cellulose-based. It should not have reacted to the acrylic paint - which is fairly inert - but has done.
So it is back to the drawing board for a third attempt!
Sunday, 16 November 2008
Saturday, 15 November 2008
Trying a new method of painting figures - the results
Thursday, 13 November 2008
Trying a new method of painting figures
Basically the technique involves undercoating the figure with white paint, then washing the figure with the basic topcoat colour, picking out the detail, and then giving the figure a coat of ink (in this case GW's Sepia Ink).
I tried the technique on some 15mm World War II American figures and I must admit that they don't look too bad. The wash means that the figures are not too dark - a common problem with smaller figures - and the ink picks out the detail that the wash has missed. It also covers over some of the painting inaccuracies that are due to my lack of skill and basic clumsiness.
I am now basing the figures, and when they are finished I hope to add some pictures of them to this blog.
Saturday, 8 November 2008
Shock! Horror! - The Lauranian Air Force is wiped out before it can even fly!
On reading the spray can instructions I cannot find any warning not to use the paint on plastics, but either I was very unlucky and bought a contaminated batch or the plastic is of a type that reacts with some chemical (probably the solvent) in the paint.
So it is back to the drawing board for the moment with regard to my Lauranian project.
Wednesday, 5 November 2008
War surplus aircraft - the Lauranian Air Force takes shape!
Tuesday, 4 November 2008
FIMO ships
The following model is a light cruiser.
These are two coastal passenger ships.
This is a coastal gunboat based on the so-called 'flat iron' gunboats used by the Royal Navy. They carried a heavy gun armament and were very manoeuvrable, but were also very slow.
A model of a conventional inshore gunboat armed with light guns and a ram.
Native sailing craft. Their wide decks make them ideal cargo carriers.
I hope to use some or all of this models in my forthcoming Laurania campaign.
Monday, 3 November 2008
Problems with my images - solved!
Now I can spend some time trying to get on with my latest project.
Long live Laurania!
Sunday, 2 November 2008
Problems with my images
I am in the process of restoring these images as and when I can, and hope to have them all back in place by this time tomorrow.