Television is rather a frightening business. But I get all the relaxation I want from my collection of model soldiers.
Peter Cushing

Tuesday 29 November 2016

Something Righteous and Beautiful

Seeing as I'm laid up with a dose of Manflu, the vilest disease known to humanity, I got the decent photos of Oddball's Tank:





Thoroughly enjoyed this and really happy with the outcome. 

Sunday 27 November 2016

"A Sherman can give you a very nice... edge."


"We see our role as essentially defensive in nature. While our armies are advancing so fast and everyone's knocking themselves out to be heroes, we are holding ourselves in reserve in case the Krauts mount a counteroffensive which threatens Paris... or maybe even New York. Then we can move in and stop them. But for 1.6 million dollars, we could become heroes for three days."

Kelly's Heroes is one of the greatest war movies ever made. I mean, yes, it's not what you would call totally accurate in every little historical detail but my god, it's a fabulous picture.



One of the things that makes the biggest impact on you is, of course, Donald Sutherland's peerless performance as Sgt. Oddball. Converting a Sherman into Oddball's ride has long been on my 'to do' list but when I noticed that Warlord had made a kit... well, it was a no brainer.

Here's a warning ahead of time; I put a lot of effort into this so you're going to have to deal with a lot - and I mean a lot - of pictures.




The kit itself is resin with a few lead additions; pretty easy to slap together. Clean up and assembly took about an hour. 





Crew wise, I decided to leave out the Driver and just do Oddball and Moriarty. I'll probably add The Turk later on.

Because it's a biggish piece of kit, I decided to crack out the airbrush. I decided early on to treat this as a model kit rather than a miniature so I used all the preshading techniques I've talked about before.




 I airbrushed it Olive Drab and then mixed in some green ochre to spray a little highlight.






And then shot a final coat of Olive Drab over the whole thing to bring it back to the natural colour leaving the highlights inteacT



And then a little brown to start on the weathering of the tracks. 

This gives us a final Sherman that looks like this which is damn near perfect for ww2. 


The only problem is, Oddball's tank looks nothing like this. I don't know if it's because the tank belonged to the Yugoslav army or if the production team simply painted it wrong or what, but in the film Oddball's ride is green. Really, really green:




Now, Ok, some of that will be down to the processing of the film stock. It's been quite heavy on the bleach and the blues are strong - look at Sutherland's eyes - but still: you cannot deny that Oddball's tank is not Olive Drab; it is green. 

So, do I keep it historically accurate or go screen accurate? I asked this question on the Bolt Action facebook group and the best answer I got was: "What would Oddball do?"

So I ate some cheese, dranks some wine, caught a few rays... and painted that bad boy green.


This was done with simply drybrushes of an intermediate green/green ochre mix with increasing amounts of green ochre. The base colour of Olive Drab is still there and the highlighting already being done meant this was more about just laying down some pigment over the top. 





I picked out all the baggage - which required a lot of stop-starting of bits of the film and looking on the interweb for stills - and painted the posters on the side. 




So here she is with Oddball and Moriarty on board awaiting decals and weathering.





And the quick daylight colour test:



A quick shot of Klear and then decals. You can't really see here but once the decals were on I then had a good scrape at them with a scalpel to wear them off a bit. 


And then I hit it with some ground up pastels for dust and dirt and various weathering:




And finally I added some mud:




And here she is with Oddball and Moriarity in situ. I'll get some proper final shots next weekend when I have some light. 








As a final thought I really enjoyed this. I really must consider doing some more World War 2 stuff, either in 15mm or 28mm. I have been looking at the new Bolt Action starter set with interest recently...

Saturday 19 November 2016

Billy Ruffian

HMS Bellerophon was an Arrogant class (and doesn't that just tell.you everything you need to know about the Royal Navy?) 74 gun ship of the line.


It was affectionately known as the 'Billy Ruffian' by the crew and was noted for being tough, fast and very maneuverable. The Bellerophon fought at all the major actions of the Napoleonic period, from the Glorious first to the Battle of the Nile to Trafalgar. In the last battle, the Billy Ruffian's captain was killed but the ship fought on, accounting for a number of French and Spanish opponents. After Waterloo, Napoleon intended to escape to America but found his way blocked by the Bellerophon. It was aboard the Billy Ruffian that the man who once bestrode Europe like a colossus was forced to surrender.

The Bellerophon may have been small, and the title may be technically correct, but you can't really call the Billy Ruffian a Third Rate Ship.



This was the last of the 1/1200 ships I bought and as soon as I realised it was a third rater there was no doubt how she would be painted; the only ship of the period I love more is the Surprise and that's not real.

This one suffered from a fairly serious miscast down one side; as you can see my painting wasn't quite enough to even up the gunports.

Rigging was done the same as the others except by now I've got it down to a single piece of thread.

So that marks the end of another project. I've completed the four ships I picked up and I have to say I'm pretty proud of what I've accomplished. I've turned them from this:

Into this:



I've learnt a few new techniques into the bargain which came in useful in some other projects. Next up:


Think positive, baby.