Snow overnight here in the Duchy and problems with the internet currently. Yesterday I got out the Funcken volume bought in 1983 and had a go at painting some 60mm plastic figures as a wee change. Same period different nationality, in this case Russian. Not feeling the vibe re painting but trying to paint through it.
Funcken titles are always such a feast for the . I must dig out a few of mine from the high bookshelf and look through them again. It has been more than a few years.
ReplyDeleteBest Regards,
Stokes
That should read, "A feast for the eyes. . ."
ReplyDeleteBest Regards,
Stokes
I got my first Funcken ( the ww1 volumes) in my early teens for my birthday from my parents. I had flu on the day and wasn’t well enough to open them or read them. I recall the disappointment mixed with anticipation.
DeleteThose Potemkin uniforms are certainly distinctive. Along with the Swedes of the same period, you could knock other 18th century armies into a cocked-hat, sartorially speaking. 😉
ReplyDeleteQuite agree, dashing in a comic opera way.
DeleteHah! Yes.
DeleteIf I remember correctly, Duffy thought the Potemkin uniform was more pragmatic than what went before and came after. I’ll have to dig out Russia’s Military Way to the West.
Those uniform books were published in the early 1970s, they always encouraged me to convert Airfix 20mm figures into something different, can't say I completed any armies, lol. Great books.
ReplyDeleteMichael
Did you ever use the fabled Banana Oil so beloved of Airfix conversion articles?
DeleteNo, I had heard about it, I just gave the plasticine a coat of superglue which, combined with paint and varnish, was strong enough. It was fun at the time, but not really productive. I then discovered metal Hinchcliffe and Garrison figures in 25mm, and I gave up on soft plastic.
DeleteMichael
Fascinating stuff.
ReplyDeleteEric
Neglected but interesting period.
DeleteAre these Chintoys? That cross of a sprue looks familiar ...
ReplyDeleteEngineer Basivich Mark.
DeleteLovely job Alan - I am working on some Gustavian Swedes - we must arrange a game
ReplyDelete