Sunday, 22 March 2026

Ancients progress and butterfly distractions...

Some short sessions after work and weekends have seen me clear the decks of 15mm ancients in progress.

Both were supposed to be "quick wins" as the figures were bought painted and "just" needed rebasing...

So much for plans! It turned out the rebasing was a major project and for the Romans, the re-touching turned into virtual repainting! The previous owner had not undercoated and bits of bare metal showed up. Irritatingly, the shields had been edged with brass which took several coats to rectify. Anyway, they are done now.

By way of a "before and after" I give you the Germans:

Before - as bought:



There was also a base with a lone figure - Herman the German - some mates were dug out:


I contemplated rebasing but rejected the idea - Herman was moved slightly to make room. The figures were nicely painted and close to my style - until I'd rebased I didn't notice how many blonds there were....a bit of a "Children of the Damned" look.....

After rebasing:





Herman's mates included a slinger converted to a standard bearer with club and the Minifigs chief from the generic command pack - more Sarmatian than German and as I painted him with an uncanny resemblance to Noggin the Nog.....


https://www.nogginthenog.co.uk/

Perhaps I should have painted him thus...

There were some stray Pompeians - painted a long while ago - I think of them as Evocati - recalled veterans.


And the Romans to form the new raw Legions for the campaign.

Before with some touch ups:


And fully finished varnished and rebased:



More Germans and Celts await paint.

Now butterfly distractions.....




A lot of the blame for this can be put down to Alan Gruber of the excellent Tradgardland Blog (https://tradgardland.blogspot.com/search/label/Hot%20club%20de%20Carpathia) who really inspired or re-inspired me with his post:

https://tradgardland.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-army-of-transilvania.html

Using the Strelets Rumanians as the first of his imaginary interwar nations. 

Like Alan, I like the chunky Strelets style - not all their figures are in this style and I understand one of their sculptors was killed in the ongoing war in Ukraine (http://www.deartonyblair.co.uk/2025/02/anton-derbilov-reality-of-war-strelets.html). 

In any case, in addition the the Romanians, they also do Hungarians and Italians as well as various WW1 and partizan figures in eastern European garb.

Alan cannot take all the blame. Indeed, he blames Bob Cordery for his series of posts on his Belle Époque armies ( https://wargamingmiscellany.blogspot.com/2026/03/the-army-of-kingdom-of-ashona-is.html).

I have had a long running desire to "do" something along imaginary Interwar lines - I thought about taking Soldier King forwards, bit that seemed a mammoth undertaking; similarly, I toyed with using my Latin American country of Costaguano and its neighbours San Angeles and El Bravado for some ABC wars:

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_countries

None took off or the plans spiralled into huge projects. Following Alan's post the seed planted long ago began to germinate. More cross-pollination had been dormant from the excellent Greg Horne's Duchy of Alzheim:

https://mavisming.blogspot.com/2015/12/long-live-borduria.html

Tin-Tin inspired (yet another influence). Searching the internet for 1920s and 1930s Imagi-Nations revealed comments from me about moving to a more generic "Graustark v Ruritania" background....

For the uninitiated, these are imaginary countries from romantic / adventure fiction popular in the C19th and early C20th set in vaguely eastern European principalities, indeed Bob is a fan:

https://wargamingmiscellany.blogspot.com/2013/05/an-to-z-of-ruritania.html

I had encountered Graustark elsewhere; Frank Chadwick in one of the versions of Command Decision gave a fictional ToE  for a battalion from Graustark. More tellingly, he also postulated both countries as real Balkan states in Space 1889, providing details of flags and armies in that era:



He also includes Transbalkania as another minor state - from yet another series of books (https://avramdavidson.com/the-adventures-of-doctor-eszterhazy-avram-davidson/). 

Frank Chadwick locates them squarely in the Balkans between Serbia, Romania and Bulgaria and on the borders of Austro-Hungary. Very much "Grand Budapest Hotel"!

With such synchronicity, who  can resist the temptations of 1920s and 1930s tanks and tankettes and obscure interwar aircraft?

13 comments:

  1. You have a busy workbench, Neil! Looks like you have snapped out of your recent winter doldrums and hit the ground running as spring arrives. That is a vibrant red on your legion shields. Looks like you matched the color perfectly on your brass cover up. I am interested in seeing your mid-war project take hold. Some Strekets figures are better than others. I am a little surprised that you didn’t stick to the same scale as your SCW project.

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    1. Thanks Jonathan. To be honest, the Romans almost got a complete repaint the finish was so bad!
      Some bright sunny weather certainly helps as well as having an aim in mind.
      Strelets are a mixed bunch and are something of a love or hate taste it seems.
      I went for a different scale as I wanted it to be (a) cheap and (b) distinctively different. Having imaginary armies allows for a wider choice of equipment.
      Neil

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  2. Definite improvement on the Ancients Neil.
    The inter-War imagi-nations thing looks like a rabbit warren if ever I saw one!

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    1. Thanks Chris. Yes, an absolute bottomless pit of a rabbit hole!
      I've spent quite a bit of time looking up place names and maps of imaginary countries!
      Neil

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  3. Nice work on the ancients, they look good and live to fight again. Interesting new project, be keeping tab to see where it takes you, I had a look at the Strelets WSS range of figures and was very tempted, but not too keen on soft plastic these days.

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    Replies
    1. I was surprised how hard it actually was , worth a look.
      Alan Tradgardland

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    2. Thanks Donnie. The Strelets plastic is quite hard as Alan says. Still suffers from flash which is never easy to remove without losing detail.
      The big problem with Strelets is the uneven production and boxes going OOP without warning for several years.
      Neil

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    3. Thanks both, I may take another look at them as they have a great range for the WSS.

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    4. Probably worth looking at the Plastic Soldier Review:

      https://plasticsoldierreview.com/ManufacturerList.aspx?id=24

      The WSS Austrians on the march are quite nice.
      Neil

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  4. P.s the Germans have come up a treat . Delighted to have offered distraction and inspiration , even in a small way, for your forthcoming Strelets interwar divertissement.
    Alan Tradgardland

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  5. Thanks Alan. I think you just iced the cake that's been in the oven for quite a while!
    Neil

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  6. I'm glad Herman has got some friends now, even if one is Noggin the Nog. Those 20mm plastics look nice, as you know, I'm a big fan of 20mm plastic. Do you have a plan for support weapons for them? It is a shame Irregulars Really Useful Guns aren't available any more but there are loads of 3D prints of interwar stuff these days.

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  7. Thanks Martin. Hermann isn't lonely anymore! ☺
    So far I have only thought about artillery - lots of guns available in plastic. For gunners, Strelets do some in chunky style with very big guns. For MGs and similar, I was debating, either ignoring or looking out suitable weapons and converting suitable figures from the sets - such as lying down who have LMG in some cases.
    Need to decide what scale I'm working to and what a stand represents - given these are small armies, probably platoons or companies.
    Neil

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Ancients progress and butterfly distractions...

Some short sessions after work and weekends have seen me clear the decks of 15mm ancients in progress. Both were supposed to be "quick ...