Naturally these were a very quick paint job, reliant on a variety of dark browns over a black undercoat for the skin tones, which are 80% of the painting. With my British force increasing somewhat I may well add some more Zulu's yet over the quite summer months; but for now it's over to other projects...
An English tabletop gamer reminisces about years of gaming, documents his many future defeats and so it would seem, mainly compensates his lack of gaming with painting and modelling...
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Saturday, June 06, 2015
Zulu Scouts
To counter all those nasty redcoats, I've added a small party of scouts to my Zulu troops; made from spare figures from the main units (both painted and unpainted) that I've assembled to date. I say 'to date', these are the first Zulu's added to my force in about 15 years, which is a scary thought.
These are Essex miniatures whose limited number of poses is in the case of near naked figures like these compensated for by the ability to re-pose their soft castings. I based them on the same size footprint as the British regulars but in pairs rather than threes; this makes two bases of these equal to one base of the massed Zulu I have, so these can all group together to make a single normal unit should it be needed.
Naturally these were a very quick paint job, reliant on a variety of dark browns over a black undercoat for the skin tones, which are 80% of the painting. With my British force increasing somewhat I may well add some more Zulu's yet over the quite summer months; but for now it's over to other projects...
Naturally these were a very quick paint job, reliant on a variety of dark browns over a black undercoat for the skin tones, which are 80% of the painting. With my British force increasing somewhat I may well add some more Zulu's yet over the quite summer months; but for now it's over to other projects...
They look great!
ReplyDeleteI like them!
ReplyDelete