Yesterday l finished the first lot of Britains etc for my interwar project. I based them very plainly on circular bases as l felt that these non square bases better represented the loose formations of the period.
I maintained the broken weaponry of these figures but will get some new arms for others. I mixed ww1 looking figures with ww2 ones.
The ones nearest the camera are dismounted cavalry. I have some steel helmeted mounted troops coming.
The chap with the binoculars was a broken machine gunner who l added two plastic tubes to his broken hands. The broken standing firing figure had a thin nail inserted up his leg to help him stand.
The command group in the garden ( Britains hedging and wall from my childhood) stand in front of a house painted last year on the outside of a breakfast biscuit box. They are watching proceedings carefully before popping indoors for a cuppa.
All in all I am pleased with how this lot have turned out. Next step with the project is to get some replacement heads and arms , await for the new arrivals to mend and to try and bid successfully for Dinky tanks on eBay within a reasonable budget.
Magnificent. Gorgeous stuff. Do you have any plans for them?
ReplyDeleteGaming on a grid using Bob’s portable rules or Ross’s rules adapted for the period.
DeleteGreat stuff. This looks good and figures, scenery/terrain etc all goes together well.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ross, l think they go together well too
DeleteSuper figure restoration and the figures go so well with the old Britains scenery. Lovely period to play with; the film on your previous blog entry was extraordinary - it's hard to believe that in a few years this was the army that was going to fight the Wehrmacht!
ReplyDeleteThanks. I agree re the way army had moved forward by ww2.
DeleteIt is wonderful to see the older figures getting back into action.
ReplyDeleteI like to see new life in the old toys too.
DeleteGreat to see these veterans out. That biscuit box house is wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThe house was painted by one of my daughters last summer. I want to work on some more,possibly a church.
DeleteI remember the post of your family crafty time. You should have the daughters work on the church and other buildings.
DeleteAn excellent plan
DeleteYe, yes, and yes!
ReplyDeleteBest Regards,
Stoke
Alan, As MJT says these match the mix and match of old and new but worryingly WW1 unprepared look of the 1935 Pathe training film you posted yesterday.
ReplyDeleteThese are looking very stylish and very promising for your interwar / early WW2 project.
Glad to see the traditional pink or red cheek dot of the traditional / Britains toy soldier. These must have functioned as simple face highlights in the old days or maybe they are just red cheeked and out of puff with all the exercise!
P.S. Spotted some Irish WW2 uniform plates on Pinterest for your suggested steel-helmeted opposition.
I do like the pink cheek look too. Essential for the toy soldier look .
DeleteAn excellent looking set up..... well done. I particularly like the house. Where did the trees come from?
ReplyDeleteI was gifted the tree but l am uncertain from whom. Your boys might enjoy painting similar houses,purely a box glued shut and then painted with acrylics.
DeleteTragardmastare,
ReplyDeleteYou've done a great job renovating these figures, and I'm sure that you'll get lots if great gaming out if them.
All the best,
Bob
Thanks Bob
DeleteA good source of weapons, arms and equipment would be the airfix multipose sets.
ReplyDeleteAn excellent idea,thanks.
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