Assyrian army

Assyrian army

Thursday, 29 December 2022

2.8cm A/T guns.

From Steven:

It’s been a while since I sent you any pictures of figures. I took these before you gave me a lightbox for Christmas (thank you), so I hope future photos will be better.

 I’m part way through a platoon of Panzer IVs but made a diversion to add three 2.8cm antitank guns to my Panzergrenadier company. Since you asked to see how I do the basing, I took photos during that process.  Here’s the end result:

 

 

If you look closely, you’ll see there is chipping and rust on the guns themselves. You may also spot that every single crewman is a different figure. No repeats! The crew of the middle gun is Battlefront, the rest are from Old Glory’s Command Decision range.

Old Glory are an odd one for me. The figures are varied and include some interesting poses, such as the one bending over clutching his ears. However, they are noticeably smaller than some other manufacturer’s so mixing is difficult. I have a pile of tank commanders and LMG gunners I can’t really use. The antitank gunners are an exception (maybe it is less obvious because most of them are kneeling?) so I could use them here. I like mixing compatible manufacturers, for variety and to support a wider range of businesses.

The Battlefront crew are actually Afrika Korps because 2.8cm guns are apparently really obscure and difficult to find individually, and DAK were the only ones I could find. That’s OK; with an appropriate paint job and strategic use of Green Stuff, they make decent SS. The Old Glory figures are normal Wehrmacht.


Figure 1 Glue figures to base

Figure 2 Add textured paint

Figure 3 Drybrush the textured paint

Figure 4 Add clumps of vegetation such as grass tufts and flowers. Add stones and gravel and paint them.
Figure 5 Add lichen to represent bushes. I often put it around and between rocks

 

Figure 6 Add static grass and flock

 1.       As well as the figures themselves, I also painted some boxes/crates from Baueda and glued them on at this stage. I also added small ammo crates made from spare Green Stuff left over after converting the gunners to be SS (waste not, want not). I find it easiest to work with Green Stuff in situ (on the base, on the tank etc).

2.       Textured paint is particularly useful here to obscure the way the figures are stuck onto the bases rather than fitting into plugs. The lighter textured paint is Agrellan Badland, which cracks when it dries to represent dried mud. It needs to be layered on thickly to work well.

3.       A quick drybrush brings out the details of the texture. This stage is also when I make the two textured paints the same colour. Since so much of it will be covered by static grass etc, I don’t go nuts with this stage.

4.       A mix of different types of grass tufts and flowers adds variety to the bases. I drybrush light khaki over the grass tufts to enhance the contrast. The boulder is a piece of aquarium gravel, with much finer gravel scattered around it. The boulder is superglued in place, then superglue spread over parts of the base and fine gravel sprinkled on top. The gravel/boulder is then painted and highlighted up with grey.

5.       I usually add lichen in close association with boulders to represent small shrubs growing up alongside or through the cracks. I dab superglue where I want the shrub to go, cut up lichen and push it into the superglue. At this scale, it is surprising how little is needed, and I often trim excess away with small scissors. I sometimes mix up different colour lichens (although I only used green lichen here). The lichen by itself looks a bit one-dimensional, so I dab some thinned-down dark brown paint into the recesses and along the larger branches, then highlight the tips with a light khaki colour. It doesn’t take long and improves the look considerably. This photo also shows more clearly a Green Stuff ammo case which the crew have placed on a spare zeltbahn. It is triangular because that’s the shape they were. As with SS uniforms, zeltbahns were reversible with a summer/spring and autumn pattern on each side. You can see the side facing up is the summer pattern but where the edges have curled over to reveal the reverse, I have painted those in the autumn pattern. I hope it is a nice little detail.

6.       Finally, add static grass and flock. Water-down PVA glue (approx. 50/50), spread it over the base and push the flock down onto it, then knock off the excess. I usually go quite heavy with the static grass, but it obviously depends on what terrain you want the figures to be on – I imagine these guys are on the Russian steppe which is pretty grassy. I have four static grass colours which I mix. In order of most to least, they are: mid-bright green, yellow hay, an almost black green and a green midway between the other two. I have two colours of flock – green and brown/red which I mix up and sprinkle in smaller quantities, particularly around and between gravelly areas. This close-up photo also shows the rust effects on the gun shield.

 

4 comments:

  1. These look great Rob, Steven certainly puts a lot of effort into his basing, which is very well worth it, given the beautiful results. I have quite a few OG Command Decision 15mm WWII in my collection too, mainly bought before FoW/Battlefront existed....I remember when that all kicked off as our mate Mark at 1866 and All That was a major player in creating this company and range of vehicles (and later, figures)

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    1. Thanks. OG do have a good mix of poses, just a shame they have been overtaken by scale creep. They are probably closer to genuine 15mm than more modern figures

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  2. The bases have come up very nicely.

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