These models were one of the reasons for the exchange I made recently between my 28mm armies and TC´s 20mm armies. This small group is some 40 years old and was kept dearly as my first Napoleonics. Then when I switched to 28mm I always felt sorry for leaving these ones behind in card boxes. When a late teenager I only had the rule book 'To the Sound of the Guns', some Napoleonics lists and the two volumes of Napoleonic Uniforms by the Funckens. Then, one day while in downtown I found in a local library my first Osprey book, Brunswick Troops. And fantastic it was as it portrayed excellent color plates an a very rich text as the unit is a relatively small one, so plenty of information was inside.
On those old days of the 80s there were already several Esci Napoleonic Boxes like the British, French and Russian. So all of them were used for this division:
The flags of the Line battalions (the Light battalions had no flags) were hand painted. They are bigger then they should but they were carefully painting in Enamel colors as typical of those pre-internet and Acrylic days.
The duke of Brunswick is a Waterloo1815 figure painted straight from the box.
Today Hat Industries has with all these types made in several boxes - Avant Garde; Leib Infantry and Cavalry - and StreletsR also has the Leib battalion, so all this converting/scratch build work is useless even if it was fun to make.
Next: French Old Guard Chasseurs










Oh, I don’t know. Scratchbuilding makes them unique.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jeffers, scratchbuilding is my favourite thing but im getting lazy :)
DeleteSuper conversions, really takes you back to the time when you had to convert so many types that didn't exist straight off the shelf. From where I am sitting, I can see my 2 vols of Funcken in the original French. Many hours in my teens spent poring over those, happy days!
ReplyDeleteHappy days for sure. Funcken books were my entry into Napoleonics. We would need several lives to model all of those. In fact I´m trying to model all in one life :)
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