This month’s post starts with a sense of Déjà vu. The nature of my project meant that there’s a lot of repetition. I’m starting from scratch, so my goal to create a legal and functional Wood Elf Army means that I’m going to have to paint an awful lot of archers over the course of the project. As I’d mentioned previously, my goal was to put as many of these as possible at the front of the challenge, to leave myself with as much of the fun stuff for the back end as possible.
I’d also mentioned my plans to paint a single hair colour a month, with a
schedule that would result in me finishing the challenge with a painted, legal
2000 point 3rd Edition Wood Elf army. I’m happy to report that is
going very well, and that I’ve ended February, the shortest month, at slightly
more than double my projections. I am where I'd expected to be at the end of April! This is great news, and not just because it
means that I don’t have to paint bows for all that much longer. No, it also
means that I’ll need to look at things to add from my box of shame/pride. I’ve
a whole bunch of Wardancers, some standard sword and shield Warrior Kinband,
and my finger slipped last night, and I bought an Elven Attack Chariot. Look
for some combination of those to be painted later in the challenge.
On to this month’s output -
1 Beastmaster –13 pts
2 Boars – 12pts
Beastmaster and his Boar buddies |
8 Archers – 88pts (Brown)
8 Archers – 88pts (Blonde)
6 Warrior Kinband, Spears – 60pts
2 Wood Riders, Longbows – 52pts
For a month 2 total of 313pts, and a combined total of 731pts including the month 1 models.
On the subject of the month 1 figures, I got them back out and took some photos to show the state of the project as a whole.
Cavalry |
All the Archers |
The Warrior Kinband |
Beastmaster and Animal Pals |
And this Lightbox filling shot of the 2 months of work below.
We're gonna need a bigger box... |
My main takeaway from this month is that I absolutely hate painting square bases. As much as I’m enjoying the rest of the project, the bases just feel wrong, and I’m finding myself craving the more familiar rounds. While it’s certainly true that massed infantry looks fantastic on the squares, they’re just really not resonating with me. I’m going to leave it another month, and see if the addition of movement trays helps me enjoy them more, but it’s definitely possible that I’ll be rebasing the army before project’s end.
Next month’s goal is to finish off this wave of infantry, and to do something fun from the list. Not sure if that’ll be a Treeman, or the Forest Spirit, or something that I don’t know yet, but it’ll definitely be nice to do something different!
Last time I posted, I’d mentioned how pleased I was with the bases in the army, and a number of comments echoed that. I thought I’d be helpful, and share how I do it. It’s not particularly hard to do, but there are a lot of steps, many of which require long drying times. Be warned – if you’re on a deadline, it’s not possible to do this technique without 48hrs to make sure it’s comfortably dried in between stages. For example, if you’ve a deadline for a blog post to be published…
Step 1 - Paint a miniature. Preferably an old one, and ideally a Wood Elf. |
Step 2 - Coat the base in PVA, and dip it in your ballast of choice. This is a home made combo of sand and small rocks. |
Step 3 - When the glue is dry, give the base a single coat of Agrax Earthshade. You're looking to keep the differences in colour, so don't worry if it looks inconsistent. That's a feature, not a bug. |
Step 5 - Highlight the rocks you've picked out with Dawnstone. |
Step 9 - Using Superglue, attach a grass tuft or two somewhere on the base. I've added a single medium sized one here - you could use 2 smaller ones to a similar effect. |
Well that's a gathering of bits and pieces if, ever I saw it, but do they come together as a group, in my opinion yes. Well done sir
ReplyDeleteThanks Golgfag, high praise indeed!
DeleteIt is beyond me how everyone is doing so many minis so well! Great job!
ReplyDeleteThanks Lissanne - it's amazing how much progress you make doing a bit each evening, and a colour or two in coffee breaks at work really adds up.
DeleteReally enjoying how these are coming together. I'm interested in this method of painting parts of different units at the same and I'll be on the look out for a project where I can try it out
ReplyDeleteThanks Shadespyre - it's just something to keep my sanity. All the gingers one month, all the blondes the next made sense to me. Means the disparate parts all hit the finish line at around the same time.
DeleteExcellent work!
ReplyDeleteWell that basing tutorial is great and I wish I'd been doing it that way!
ReplyDeleteThanks goblinpaladin. Hope it was useful, even if you never use it. It does take a long time, even if each stage is pretty quick to do. So much waiting for things to dry...
DeleteReally nice work, love the bases!
ReplyDeleteThese old Jez Goodwin sculpts are some of my favourites from back in the day and you've done an outstanding job on them, keep it up dude. Oh and stick with square bases please ;)
ReplyDeleteLovely earthy tones and the red striped trousers are a nice contrast - fantastic work!
ReplyDeleteDon't you just hate it when your finger slips like that?!?! ;-)
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to see you tackle the chariot later in the challenge!
Great work again this month! You've been incredibly productive and it's looking like a serious army already! Great choice of colours - they look really cohesive, but there's still lots of individual detail and character too.
Productivity win! Your force is really coming together already!
ReplyDeleteGreat basing tutorial too.