This Division is made of converted WW1 British infantry and WW2 Japanese Airfix and Atlantic figures with pinned Brodie helmets. The Artillery is mostly Irregular Miniatures and the tanks are Airfix and Red Star. The few aircraft are the usual Airfix and Revell. Made years ago and before better models showed I even had to make the Lewis LMGs out of GreenStuff.
This a wargaming place were you can see a growing collection of miniatures and terrain of many historical periods in 20mm (but also a few 10mm,15mm and 28mm) started when I was 10 yo. At the moment it has several tens of thousands of miniatures from foot figures to Destroyers. Occasionally there are some war movie critics and some travel to military sites. My family considers it the best wargaming site in the World even if it is the only one they know. More on @joaopeixoto5249 YouTube Channel.
Sunday, 15 January 2023
Wednesday, 11 January 2023
Great War Spearhead II in 20mm. The support weapons of the British Infantry Corps in WW1.
I´ve just finished rebasing a full British infantry division and supporting artillery and waiting for the arrival of a few boxes of Hat Canadians to make the missing division. I´ll show you these in a next video. In the meantime, and as an appetizer, here goes some tanks, command and mortar stands.
The Mark I tanks are Airfix with no change but the anti-grenade cover for the one in the middle.
For a staff car this old timer will do. I already found a few in the local fish market that were converted for French and Belgian WW2 staff cars. The only serious change was the wheels, replaced by 3d printed ones (even if not correct).
The figures are Airfix artillerymen for the seated figures and Emhar for the officers. The one to the right got some Evergreen in its shorts and became a proper Western front Officer.
For a much better model of a true British staff car you have the Roden Vauxhaull D-type.
The 6" Newton mortar is Hat and crew comes from converted old Aifix and Emhar artillery box.
The Emhar mortar doesn´t have a bipod and got an Evergreen one...
...as well as all the others, based on the Airfix Stokes, the one with the ugly triangular with full plastic piece as a bipod.
The crew are all sorts of plastics, Emhar, Airfix Infantry (including the medic) and Airfix Horse Artillery.
Emhar Brigade command stands with the helmeted figures converted from shorts to trousers.
Next: Maybe the video of the WW1 British Corps.
Fire&Fury ACW rules in 20mm - The 'Sunday picnic uniforms' of Bull Run 1861
This small collection of miniatures was painted around some 40 years ago, glued to some ugly card and kept inside boxes all this time. The promise was to return one day and base them accordingly (to F&F bases), after building all units for Gettysburg. So this group shows some of the most famous units of the ACW present at Bull Run that didn't use funny and innocent uniforms throughout the rest of the war (like the Fire Zouaves), or simply didn't participate in no other major action (like the US Marines). Also in late 1987 a very nice group of articles were released by the Military Modelling magazine with Bull Run as one of its subjects which helped many modelers and wargamers to venture into the first battle of the American Civil War, before a relative standardization of its uniforms.
In terms of plastic figures we had in those days the famous ACW Airfix and Revell boxes. These were intended to show "standard" uniforms from late 1861 on without, for instance, any Zouaves (firstly shown with the Italeri box and later with HAT miniatures). So the 'Sunday picnic uniforms' had to be made up in plastic from different sources...
The first source used were the cheap Chinese/Hong Kong copies of the WW2 Japanese hard plastic from Esci. These figures were abundant everywhere in the 80's and fortunately for this case they were not very detailed. By cutting the brim of the Japanese field hat you can have reasonable Zouave figures. This group is the famous Confederate Louisiana Tigers.
I already have these ones for Gettysburg but not with the Havelock cap covers that made them distinctive at Bull Run (together with other units that also used them). The figures are French Foreign Legion from Esci and Airfix, with the bottom part of the coats disguised as large trousers with the help of GreenStuff (this last surgery was only made last week but improved its appearance)
The 11th New York volunteers, the famous 'Fire Zouaves' were again made of Hong Kong WW2 Japanese copies. A cut in the brim of the field hat and they are done. The flags were also hand painted in 1987...
There were some flashy officers in the battle and as F&F use figure markers. This one is an old conversion of a Russian Crimean war officer from Esci with a cowboy hat from Revell.
Next: The support guns of the British Infantry of WW1.