Showing posts with label Unicorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unicorn. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2024

Paul's Wood Elves of Averlorn - Wyld Carden! (1466 pts)

This month I have been mostly painting trees and birbs. Also a bear, and a baby unicorn, or "Babycorn" if you will.... 

What do you mean you won't!? Stop throwing those rotten vegetables! 

Listen, ignore the puns and focus on the minis and you might notice a theme. That's right, it's my "Wyld Carden" month! :p

OK, just that one last pun, but it was totally worth it in tribute to the one and only Trish "Mother of Monsters" Carden (nee Morrison) who sculpted nearly everything I painted this month... and what a genuine pleasure that has been!

A fellow OWAC veteran gave me a sound piece of advice in relation to the amazing Treeman sculpt from Trish's Harrowhyrst range from Footsore Miniatures. Pick your base wood colour, then get a light dry brush on it early in the process to reveal the detail. Simple but very effective advice and something that really pays dividends with so many of Trish's models from across the last 30+ years. These are sculpts that really reward careful dry brushing and generous inking and shading. Trish has already done the work with her blades and shapers and these minis are so packed full of character and detail that they really do start to 'paint themselves' once you have got stuck in, with new details seemingly emerging with each new step of the painting process. 

I've used red where I can get away with it, so the impish sprite is obviously a "red cap" and the lovers initials are in a russet red heart. The little owl is indeed painted as a "Little Owl" as one of our native UK species, even if scale wise it is closer to a Brown Owl.... so it's obviously a 'Giant' Little Owl! :D 

Something I really came to love and appreciate is the consistency of the details and textures on the tree-beasties across multiples time periods and miniature lines, which allowed me to blend them all in to one force by effectively use the same paint recipes for bark textures, knots and gnarls, mossy growths, fungal protrusions, and thick thorny claws.  


The Middlehammer era Dryads are supplemented by some juveniles and an elder, both sculpts from the current Harrowhyrst range, and I really like how their inclusion hints at a life cycle of the tree folk. The two different sizes of treeman add to this organic variation which is something I enjoy. 


Deep red was used to signify blood stained wood on the claws of the 'mature' dryads, and to emphasise  the danger of the snapping heads of the juveniles and the antler like crown of the elder, as well as being a strong tie to one of the theme colours for a large part of my army. The slightly sickly orange was chosen to emulate the Chicken of the Woods bracket fungus which is common in the woods local to us and picks up on one of theme colours for the other half of my army. 

Finally for the tree-folk the equally iconic Marauder Treeman, a chunky beaut of a sculpt that was a must have for Wood Elf armies when I was growing up. This one has waited nearly 30 years to be painted, so I hope I've done it justice by choosing to accentuate the Chrace/Winter colour scheme from the established tree-folk colour pallet. 


Keeping the theme of being inspired by local wildlife I decided that my Warhawks would in fact be War-buzzards, the Buzzard being the most common bird of prey in the British Isles and a regular sight in the skies over the woods near our house.


The riders are inspired by Dexy's Midnight Runners again, as Wood Elf Sky-jockeys definitely seemed like the sort who would go for double denim. I finished painting them after returning from a family holiday in Brittany, where we also saw lots of birds of prey, so they ended up having French accents in my head, and then for some reason I kept thinking of Jean-Claude Van Damme, who is not French but is definitely into double denim...

Actual image of a Wood Elf Sky-jockey. Just look at the hair and cheek bones.




Standing by a menhir on the NW Atlantic coast I was struck by the sense of connection of the ancient megalithic cultures of the western coast and this lent some inspiration when I was back at my painting table, so the shield design is a very poor freehand attempt at the 'Triskelion' design common in Brittany, and the basing is intended to be more 'coastal' which will hopefully tie them in with both the Ellyria/Tyranoc (as will the blue and yellow colour scheme) and Lothern elements of my High Elf force.

"In Brittany the Triskel is still widely present, a symbol of regeneration, it represents independence and autonomy and is worn for protection and good luck"

A truly ancient motif it has had many meanings over the years, but this one works in this instance as it fits with how I am beginning to think of my Wood/Coastal Elves as representing more rural or remote peoples of Ulthuan within my High Elf army.



Despite having started this year with enough Wood Elves for two OWACs I nevertheless acquired some more along the way, mostly because inspiration struck me when I saw a second Giant Eagle sculpt and an old school Wardancer with her tab already cut off going for a reasonable price on one of the trading groups. Turns out this combo will also pass as a good proxy for Master Mage Thalandor riding Gwandor the Black, and wielding the Spear of Daith





Sadly my mojo ran out before I could bring myself to sculpt on the Talisman of Qwarr, but I might go back to add in the magical war paint in the future to complete the not-Thalandor look. Gwandor is painted in the style of a White Tailed Eagle as the easiest native eagle colour pattern to darken down to 'black', but it is also fitting as it is the British Isles largest bird of prey. 

The other Giant Eagle has been painted in the style of the Golden Eagle, also native (and more common) to the British Isles, a theme which is continued with the Giant Barn Owl (not a Trish Carden sculpt this one, but available from Otherworld Miniatures 'Wilderness Encounters' series). I think I will do some more work on the base in the future, and as the first element of my Wood Elf 'baggage train' I fancy adding some bundles or nets full of supplies for the owl to be swooping in to pick up or drop off.

Also from Otherworld (and part of a lovely Father's Day gift so painted up in record time to be included here) is this Black Bear. A satisfyingly chunky lump of metal. More work needed on the base again, but it will do for now. 



My final Trish sculpt of the month, this juvenile unicorn has such a cheeky and mischievous expression I've named it "Rascal". The unusual blue and orange colour scheme and two tone coat is intended to signify that Rascal is the offspring of my other two Unicorns. I suspect that Rascal eats more of the supplies than they help carry :P 


Last but not least we have the 'Kippine' a a forest creature from D&D which I will use as a proxy Griffon for my Wood Elves. This is a 3D print that was a gift from a very good friend (even if she does collect thrice cursed Dark Elves!) and it took me far too long to paint it, but it deserved to be part of a big project like this. The base was completed first as it allowed me to test out my bark recipe before painting the tree-folk, and it was only after I painted the giant Barn Owl that I decided on a similar colour scheme for the Kippine itself.



Total for the month:

10 Dryads - 350 pts
2 Treemen - 560 pts
5 Warhawk Riders - 150 pts
Giant Eagle - 75 pts
Wood Elf Hero w/Spear on Giant Eagle - 181 pts
Kippine (counts as Griffon) - 150 pts

"Baggage Train"
Black Bear
Giant Barn Owl
Juvenile Unicorn

Total:  1466 pts





Tom's Bony Bit


For my wildcard month I painted some carrion from forlorn hope miniatures. I wanted to use contrast paints on my carrion so I started with a zenithal highlight of wraith bone and then use red, purple and bone, the same colours as my zombie dragon.


They needed some drilling and pinning to stay on their stands so that was something to learn about with my dads help. The bases were fun to do because I could use some shields and a part of a skeleton horse to add some detail. 





The riders turned out well but the purple was a bit to much on the swords. I liked using Rakarth Flesh on the wings to add some sickly highlights.





This is the ghoul king from the zombie dragon kit that I painted up separately and will count as a wight lord for warhammer 5th edition. I experimented with slap-chop painting to get the highlights painted in first, then I used a blue ink for the  underside to make the shadows darker and a green ink on top to make the highlights pop. I used skeleton horde for the bones and rags and Tamiya clear red for the blood effect. The bone and red tie him to rest of the army but the sickly green is a new colour for zombies and ghouls if I add them to my army.

Total for the month:

3 Carrion - 135 pts
Wight (Ghoul) Lord  - 65 pts

Total: 200 pts


That's it from us for the final month of OWAC VII - congratulations to everyone who made it this far, we'll see you next month for the wrap up with our best Avenging Dark Destroyer poses ready!

Saturday, July 6, 2024

Shadespyre's June Post - Wildcard Month - Guardians of the Moonglade - 3rd Edition Wood Elves (+955 points)

 OWAC VII - Wildcard Month - Guardians of the Moonglade

June

The final month. To be honest, having completed everything in the original plan and so much of the reserves it was a bit hard to get going again for a final effort. But once I did get back to it I enjoyed ticking the last few units off my list.

Let's start with some extra Elf heroes. I'm very aware that by concentrating on unit after unit of archers, I have missed out on painting some of the great Elf minis of the period, so here are four of them:




I would have loved to include a unit or two of these guys for some proper melee potential, but the sad truth is they are difficult and expensive to collect in numbers, possibly because they are so cool that no-one wants to part with them. The champion with the orc head, and the one with the sword above his head, are iconic members of this range, but the Elf with the two handed sword has always been my favourite, so I wanted to paint one.

These guys represent my Autumn, Spring, Summer and an experimental Winter colour scheme. I really like how the latter looks, but he doesn't feel very "Wood Elfy" to me, so maybe this is a starting point for a High Elf army...

And now for some completely unplanned, bonus miniatures.
 

Once I realised that the Owl theme was going to be a thing, I went fishing in my collection to find thisold favourite. This dapper chap is a Citadel C29 Giant Owl from back in 1985. The code makes him part of the "Monsters" range even though he is a total sweetheart. I elevated him on a grassy tump to make him a little more impressive next to the Elves. It might be possible to pop a rider on him but I'll be including him as part of a Monstrous Host.


Also unplanned, here is a Blunicorn of unknown origin, pinched off Ebay for a fiver. Is it even a Wood Elf army without a Blunicorn? I feel like everyone else in Team Wood Elves has one, now.

Sadly, without a suitable Elf maiden to ride her, Bluey will have to stay as a mascot rather than a points scoring unit.

Back to planned bonus miniatures, now.

Hidden Reserves

These vague blobs were numbers 6 and 7 on the list


And now I can reveal that the vague blobs are hiding lots and lots and lots of... Halflings!

Everyone loves halflings, right? There's an Ally list for them in Warhammer Armies, and Wood Elves (along with Empire, Brets and Dwarves) are allowed to make use of them. But I didn't want to use the chubby, chicken munching, cook pot wearing Citadel Halflings (even though I have collected one of each of all the 80s and 90s ranges) here, I wanted more rugged looking, serious minded Halflings who might live in the outer forest, farming and hunting and foraging and tussling with wolves and goblins and beastmen. And that meant Mark Copplestone's halflings, currently available via North Star Miniatures.


After rushing to convert a command group back in December, I revisited these poor efforts and am much happier with the newer version.


Now painted and complete with their 6th Edition Empire plastic hats. The oak leaf standard is again made from cheap jewellery, which is a gold mine of little metal bits and bobs, it turns out. The standard bearer has goofy buck teeth, so we haven't entirely left the comedy halfling trope behind. 

As well as some very cheap BS4 missile fire, this unit also contains three characters and the option to carry a magic standard and a magic weapon.

The rest of the halfling contingent is made up of skirmishers with slings. Skirmishing Elves always seem like a bit of a waste of points as they are decent close combat troops, whereas these little fellas have no business tangling with anything bigger than a Goblin.



And finally (?)

Hidden Reserve No 8

The funny shaped blob conceals the Forest Dragon, Quercus.


And here is my painted version.

Although this is a brand new resin model, and not produced by GW, there is a proper connection to Oldhammer because the sculptor is Trish Carden who sculpted about a zillion Citadel, GW and Forgeworld minis starting way back in 1984.

You can get your own Quercus from Footsore Miniatures, who are casting and distributing Trish's growing HarrowHyrst miniatures range. 

Army List Additions:

I'm not considering the heroes or the blunicorn to be part of the army list, but it's not like I'm short of points is it?

Adding Champions to the halfling slingers doubles the cost of each unit, but also gives them a surprising combat boost in the form of three WS4 attacks which might swing a fight with enemy skirmishers.

Scores for June:       955    points   71 models

1 x Autumn Hero                                                                                                                   
1 x Spring Hero
1 x Summer Hero
1 x Winter Hero    
                                           
1 x Blunicorn                                                                                                                        0 points 

Halfling Allies List:
1 x Halfling Contingent Commander                                                                             77 points
1 x Ally Standard Bearer                                                                                                   73 points         
22 x Halfling Militia     (Champion, Musician, Bow, Light Armour, Shield)         144 points
10 x Halfling Militia      (Champion, Shield, Sling)                                                     84 points         
10 x Halfling Militia      (Champion, Shield, Sling)                                                     84 points
10 x Halfling Militia     (Champion, Shield, Sling)                                                      84 points  
10 x Halfling Militia     (Champion, Shield, Sling)                                                      84 points 

Monstrous Host:
1 x Giant Owl (counted as Giant Eagle)                                                                      75 points
1 x  Dragon                                                                                                                       250 points 
                    
Running Total:          7902  points  228  models

STOP THE PRESS!

I just received this glorious Ral Partha Cloud Giant, an absolute classic old mini by the great Tom Meier, painted for me by our OWAC pal Chris Howell. Thanks Chris, he's fantastic, and such a generous gift! 





NEXT TIME:

Some army pictures and reflections on the project.

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