1st British muster

The second guards brigade is now finished, so here is a muster of my first four British brigades for Waterloo:Loads more on the painting table.

cheers

Comments

  1. As a new comer, I would like to say THANK YOU for your blog, it helps a lot for anyone (me in particular) who wants to start in 6 mm.
    One question: what is the purpose of undercoating the figures ? Some people don't use it (have a look on Adler site for example). So is it realy necessary ?

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  2. Those guys look pretty awesome!

    I have been pondering 6mm since January. Maybe I'll start...

    Otto

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  3. Steve,

    More first-class figures - roll on the Waterloo game!

    Regards

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  4. Man, I would commission you to paint me a pair of 6mm armies in a SECOND. Would you ever consider such a thing?

    Oh, and I would think undercoating on these guys would be KEY. You want the undercoat of black to basically "catch" any places you forgot to put paint... and I would imagine on these tiny guys you could really miss a few tiny spots.

    Anyway, those are frikking beautiful.

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  5. OK thanks for explanation...
    By the way, which reference of brown do you use for undercoating ?

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  6. Hi Eric, sorry I don't understand your question as I undercoat most figures in black.

    Author, thanks for the kind comments but I don't paint commission work. It is hard enough to find time to paint for myself :)

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  7. Outstanding! What color red did you use on the British?

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  8. Red was GW Dark flesh and then Vallejo flat red

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  9. Hello Steve,

    Sorry I made a confusion with Braxen who is advising to undercoat in dark brown
    http://sixtwentyeight.blogspot.com/2008/08/painting-6mm-french-infantry-tutorial.html
    I think I'll try both way, so to have my own opinion...
    Cheers
    Eric

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  10. Steve,

    What color blue do you use for your French?

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  11. Hi Matt

    For the French I start with Vallejo Prussin Blue and then highlight with Vallejo Flat Blue.

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  12. Absolutely incredible, no other words for it.

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  13. Hi Steve,
    For bayonets and swords, which colour(s) do you use (along with supplier's reference) ?
    Same question for French dragoons helmets (yellow/gold metallic) ?
    Thanks in advance
    Eric

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  14. Hello, Eric
    For bayonets/gunmetal I use a base of Anita's Acrylics Grey, highlighted with Anita's Acrylics Dove Grey.

    Dragoon helmets start with a base of bronze and are then highlighted with gold and a final dab of antique gold (all Folk-Art I think)

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  15. Hello Steve,
    I am afraid I could not find thes in France, at least where I leave... Any idea about equivalent ref in GW or Vallejo paints ?

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  16. Hi Eric

    Don't overthink it too much!

    For the muskets/bayonets you need a "medium grey" like you might paint a battleship with, and a "light" grey.

    For the metallics, all ranges probably have a bronze and a gold. For highlighting you need something lighter than "gold". Either find a suitable paint or mix a little silver into your regular gold.

    cheers

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  17. Hi Steve

    These really are inspirational - I might just buy a couple of boxes of French from Baccus next time I'm at a show and paint them when in those 5-10mins sots I get throughout the day. It's not enough time to do anything with my 28mm's but I can see myself getting a strip of these done.

    I've always wanted to do the big Napoleonic battles which are almost impossible in 28mm.

    Keep the posts coming.

    PeteB

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