Looking at the scene being enacted, it seems to me that one of the men is sponging the piece out whilst the others train it on a new target under the beady eye of their officer. I have been painting a test figure as an ouvrier to help the gunners build their battery positions. If he works out well, then there will be more added; I expect fellows like him to be useful in future seiges.
I've finally succumbed to the temptation that began with seeing some of the figures on Jim Purkys' excellent blog. I have gone on a small spending spree on the Tradition website and bought a few command figures which I'll be taking a little time over as I paint in the next few weeks as little rewards for me as I start to gear up again to full painting speed.
I've finally succumbed to the temptation that began with seeing some of the figures on Jim Purkys' excellent blog. I have gone on a small spending spree on the Tradition website and bought a few command figures which I'll be taking a little time over as I paint in the next few weeks as little rewards for me as I start to gear up again to full painting speed.
Considering that at the moment my Prussian Army is no more than IR 13 (with FR35 in production), a Squadron of Dragoons and some assorted von Kleist Freikorps, it is a little like having Napoleon leading the 33rd Light Infantry but, so be it.
I'm painting Seydlitz next, using the Willie Cuirassier Officer figure. Yummy!
10 comments:
Hi Greg,
Nice to see you painting again - superb looking figures. Just need you set up your fort again for a shot (no pun intended) with that cannon.
Ian
Nicely done!
Thanks for sharing,
Ed v. H-F
I wonder if the Ouvriers d'Artillerie were indeed pionners / labour unskilled manpower as generally suggested (e.g. in Funcken): infantrymen were available for such tasks.
One characteristic of the Artillery was it *huge* train -so that pontoons and pontooneers were, in France, attached to the Artillery, the only Arm with the required teams, vehicles and skills.
So maybe the Ouvriers were specialists of Train maintenance -cartbuilders, carpenters, farriers, saddlers; perhaps also blackpowder specialists, builders of caseshots... Indeed it was the case for the 'ouvriers' attached to infantry and cavalry regiments (with tailors and 'armuriers')...
Jean-Louis
Nicely painted! (and one can't fault the book acting as a "backdrop") :-)
Thank-you Gentlemen,
Ian, I do have a hankering to get out my fort again and have a little rial battle, to be sure. I am assembling some Hinchcliffe garrison artillery that is turning out to be rather fiddly. I am tempted to turn to Eureka Pirate Ship guns to supplement them before I get to frustrated!
Jean-Louis - you are probably right; I shall have to imagine that my Ouvriers have been drafted into the seige-lines for their mechanical abilities.
Fitz and Ed - thanks for your kind compliments on the figures; it's always a pleasure to get some feedback; I often work in something of a vacuum.
Best regards,
Greg
Hi Greg,
Glad to see you're painting again. Your artillery battery and Frederick figures are lovely. I too am tempted to add some Tradition/Stadden figures, although I fear they would absolutely tower over my Revell Plastics, which are about 30-31mm tall. They work with the RSMs. . . just. I hear that the Traditions are quite a bit taller than the RSM figures. Anyway, looking forward to more of your work in the coming weeks.
Best Regards,
Stokes
P.S.
I answered your OOB question over at my blog.
I do like the figures for the artillery and hhave always tried to make each of my batteries tell a tale. I especially like yours in the process of swabbing out.
Great Miniatures, I like them
Tradition (Stadden also has a nice range of 25mm figures that should work with the RSM figures). Most people overlook this range as the 30mm range gets all the attention.
I had one of those figure - Stadden officer with spontoon, but I gave it to one of our group members, Jim Harms, who is very tall and was looking for figure to represent himself in one of his Prussian regiments.
Nice artillery
-- Allan
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