(Para a versão en português clique aqui)
This is a blog focused on 1/72 scale miniatures, but the nice details of Essex 15mm minis caught my attention and so I decided to buy some and add them to my medieval colection.
I've bought, so far:
1) from Ebay, a Hussite army pack, which contains:
- 1 Horse wagon with 2 horses
- 3 "mantlet wagons" (I'd call these "wheeled pavises") each with 2 horses
- 1 artillery wagon (with a wooden frame with sliding doors, to protect men and guns)
- 1 small canon with a crew of 2 men
- 3 knights (I'd say heavy/medium cavalry)
- 2 mounted crossbowmen
- 8 halberdiers
- 8 flailmen
And quite a few hand gunners, crossbowmen, etc. I do not remember the exact number right now.
2) a lot of separate kits straight from the Essex website:
- A command group consisted of a king, a herald and a standard bearer
- Many knights on horses, from light cavalry to gendarmes with armoured horses
- 8 knights on foot
- 8 medium swordsmen
- 3 groups of peasants (which are 3 different kits: armed peasants, armed pilgrims and "poorly-armed hordes")
- 6 monks (I like miniatures of priests. They add more realism and variety to games)
- 24 pikemen (3 groups of 8, each group holding the pike in a different position, in order to make a pike block)
- And others (do not remeber how many: crossbowmen, handgunners, assorted footmen, etc.)
Yesterday I started to base them, since most of them do not stand by theirselves (no pun intended) due to their very thin lead bases.
I do not like the idea of gluing miniatures to a base forming a permanently based group - I like versatility. So I decided to base each miniature individually and then build larger bases in wich there will be holes where to fix each individual miniature in a way that I can change each one whenever I want.
To base each mini, I cutted small round discs made of biscuit (for those of yiu who might nit know: biscuit is "cold porcelain", which hardens after a few hours of contact with air) and then I glued each miniature on a disc using loctite superbonder:
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| All these minis are from the Hussite army pack. The first ten discs are all irregular. Only after a few tries I came up with a quick way of making standardized biscuit discs. |
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| 3 different types of gunners from the Hussite army pack |
I chose green collored biscuit because I think it will mix well with grass (and I will use diorama grass and pebbles to cover the bases).
Honestly I expected that this hussite army bundle would have peasant miniatures (my favorite kind of medieval minis), but I guess this army represents more "professional" hussites - after having fought a few battles and after looting fallen soldiers and knights. I guess the flailmen could represent "better armed peasants" or "battle-hardened peasants", I guess. Anyway, the flailmen are very versatile and could fit into a peasant army as well. I mean, every miniature from this Hussite army pack is very versatile and could fit into any dark ages, late medieval and renaissance army. Some even in ancient armies. Versatility is a key word here, and I like it a lot.
Eventually I'll expand this european army (adding more peasant units, siege weapons., etc.) and also build a Muslim army. Perhaps a 15mm viking army too. I've been checking the Essex website and I think that many English Civil War miniatures could easily be used as medievals (specially the pikemen, billmen and civilians).
Let's see. Time will tell.
For the muslim army I think I'll use grey biscuit for their individual bases because it probably will mix well with either grass or sand (the grey bases will pass off easily as pebbles).
On a future post I'll share the results of my basing process and (hopefuly) pictures of a few painted minis and the assembled war mantlets and wagons.
































