My opinion on current events is sometimes influenced by my awareness of history:
It's mind-boggling that British soldiers from the 1700s were held more accountable than modern American policemen. If you're confused, google (or baidu or yandex) "Darren Wilson".
Related fun fact: if you are a visitor from literally any other country, you have a lower per-capita imprisonment rate than we do here. Putin's Russia? Communist China? Any random banana republic or middle-eastern petro-kingdom? Your government has imprisoned less of its citizens than mine has!
And we call ourselves "Land of the Free"!
A tabletop gaming blog, with a vague bias towards Central/Eastern Europe and the Early Modern period.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Monday, November 24, 2014
Sunday, November 16, 2014
commander's aides
Since I keep sleeping through the daylight hours, I'm trying an alternative method of taking pictures. I don't think I like this, the flash is quite unforgiving. But here are some pictures of the miniatures that came with the TAG commanders I bought.
The pointing guy with the mail shirt is one of my favorite miniatures ever. I'll have to put a bit more work into painting him to be worthy of the sculpt.
The pointing guy with the mail shirt is one of my favorite miniatures ever. I'll have to put a bit more work into painting him to be worthy of the sculpt.
Sunday, November 9, 2014
painted boss guys
Here they are, in ascending order of goodness. I am especially pleased with Wisniowecki and the reiter at the end.
Saturday, November 8, 2014
more commanders
Not sure why I'm posting WiP shots of these guys, since there's no real converting here. Oh well
The dude on the left is TAG's Janusz Radziwiłł, who I will be using as Marcin Kalinowski, nominal commander of the left wing at Berestechko. The de facto commander was Wiśniowiecki from the last post.
In the middle is TAG's generic Cossack general, who is representing Mattviy Hladky (or something like that; Ukrainian names are even less consistently transliterated into English than Russian ones). The miniature ships with a pony instead of a warhorse, which is historically accurate, but aesthetically unacceptable for a commander, so I swapped it out for one of the Polish horses. He'll be commanding whichever wing Filon isn't commanding.
On the right is TAG's pancerny/cossack unit commander who makes a fine Stanisław Lanckoroński, commander of the Polish right wing. I just sculpted some fur and added a plume to turn his dumb haiduk-style pillbox cap into a proper fur hat.
These guys also came with staff/attendant figs, but they're even less converted, so I won't post them until they've been painted.
The dude on the left is TAG's Janusz Radziwiłł, who I will be using as Marcin Kalinowski, nominal commander of the left wing at Berestechko. The de facto commander was Wiśniowiecki from the last post.
In the middle is TAG's generic Cossack general, who is representing Mattviy Hladky (or something like that; Ukrainian names are even less consistently transliterated into English than Russian ones). The miniature ships with a pony instead of a warhorse, which is historically accurate, but aesthetically unacceptable for a commander, so I swapped it out for one of the Polish horses. He'll be commanding whichever wing Filon isn't commanding.
On the right is TAG's pancerny/cossack unit commander who makes a fine Stanisław Lanckoroński, commander of the Polish right wing. I just sculpted some fur and added a plume to turn his dumb haiduk-style pillbox cap into a proper fur hat.
These guys also came with staff/attendant figs, but they're even less converted, so I won't post them until they've been painted.
Friday, November 7, 2014
Some Commandery Types
Figured I'd show off some works-in-progress. I've got some genuine Eastern Europe character types on their way from TAG, but my out-of-period Perry miniatures arrived earlier.
All of these started off as ACW generals (of the treasonous racist variety), but by tweaking the headgear and a few other details they can make passable Cossacks and Poles. The leftmost is going to be Filon Djalali, one of the Khmelnitsky's subordinates at Berestechko. But if he turns out well enough, I might swap his sword for a mace and have him replace my earlier Ivan Bohun. They have a similar sort of dashing heroic pose.
The dude on the right is supposed to represent Jeremi Wisniowecki. I love his cool, imperious pose, and I added longer hair and a bunch of fur lining to represent this portrait of the guy. Also a hat, even if the portrait doesn't have one, because headgear seems almost mandatory for the era.
The guy in the middle doesn't represent any particular historical guy. His gloves looked quite reiter-ish to me, so I gave him a floppy western hat and plume from the Warlord infantry box, and sculpted a quick lace collar. I might just have him be Wisniowecki's aide, they do look like they're conversing. Or of course he could be a Swede if I ever run my western-style guys as Swedish force.
The guy in the middle doesn't represent any particular historical guy. His gloves looked quite reiter-ish to me, so I gave him a floppy western hat and plume from the Warlord infantry box, and sculpted a quick lace collar. I might just have him be Wisniowecki's aide, they do look like they're conversing. Or of course he could be a Swede if I ever run my western-style guys as Swedish force.
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