Artizan sculpts have a great look to them, don't they? The fields seems to be turning over to the plastic kits these days, but this Artizan stuff is lovely. Great job.
March 10, 2022 at 9:17 AM
To fulfill the theme requirement of one of the Challenge Quadrant planets, I painted two sections of No. 11 (Scottish) Commando, who were involved in 'Operation Flipper'.
These are the first British North Africa figures I have done, but I am not sure if I want to expand my miniature collection further in that direction. I kind of bought them by
mistake, and didn't realize until I opened the blisters that half of the
figures were wearing shorts or 'Bombay Bloomers'.
I was planning to just sell them unpainted online, but when I saw the
'Desert' theme on the Challenge Quadrant I thought, "I have just the
figures for that theme."The
miniatures are by Artizan Designs and consist of an officer in a
Balmoral, a sergeant wearing a Tam O'Shanter and kilt with kilt apron,
and a dozen soldiers armed with a mix of SMLE No. 1 Mk IIIs, Bren guns,
or Thompson submachine guns. I found the detail very pronounced, which
made them quite enjoyable to paint, especially after painting all those
PSC Soviets. In my usual style, I glued the figures onto 1" fender
washers, added sand to the bases, and primed everything black using an
airbrush. They were then painted using a selection of Vallejo acrylics
suggested by the Artizan Designs painting guide for the 8th Army in North Africa.
I also used some GW washes, specifically Reikland Fleshshade on all the
skin areas, and Agrax Earthshade on the uniforms and weapons. All in
all, I am pretty happy with the way things turned out.[Image]Two sections of No. 11 (Scottish) Commando [Image]No. 1 Section commanded by an officer
[Image]Close up of the officer with two supporting riflemen [Image]No. 2 Section commanded by a sergeant [Image]Close up of the sergeant with his kilt and kilt apron Thanks for reading.
"Challenge Submission #10 - No. 11 (Scottish) Commando in North Africa"
1 Comment -
Artizan sculpts have a great look to them, don't they? The fields seems to be turning over to the plastic kits these days, but this Artizan stuff is lovely. Great job.
March 10, 2022 at 9:17 AM