So there were a few requests relating to the first lead pile dip, I'm on holiday so coping with only being able to edit in HTML and a few photos I took befor leaving I present some requests.
First the marine bolt battery, only showing one of two I have here. The same machine as the dark elves but a different crew. Jes Goodwicn, and brilliant as would be expected. The commander foreshadows the 90's high elves.
Next a comparison of the sea elf spears to some high elves. Jes Goodwin high elf, marauder high elf, marauder sea elf, Gilandiril, marauder high elf an marauder sea elf. Personally the only difference to me is style and I would therefore have them in different units but certainly the same army.
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
Erny's lead pile dip number 1b: Marine bolt battery and marauder sea elf comparison.
Lastly archers, citadel, marauder sea elf and marauder high elf. All great happily have them in the same army but different units. Indeed that's the plan.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
Here’s to the Guardroom.
An add from WD83 also to be found in Dragon magazine in the 80's. |
It’s
probably fair to say that most people who collect 80’s miniatures, games using
80’s rules or paint miniatures in an 80’s style was a kid or young adult in the
80’s. So it is probably also fair to say that within our band, given the scarcity
of 80’s Games Workshops, that most of us got our Citadel, Grenadier, Ral Patha,
Warhammer or D&D fix from local independent stores.
Recently I’ve
had real cause to tread paths long neglected and as fate would have it that
path lead past The Guardroom in Dunstable home of Axle. What once stood on that spot was for me a slice of
gaming culture now gone forever and perhaps one most sorely missed. The dingy, packed to the rafters games shop.
Some time
in the mid 80’s my favorite place to buy airfix soldiers and tanks closed and
so I found my way to a pokey little shop known as the guard room. There was a
small collection of plastic kits but otherwise it was like no model shop I had
ever encountered. Behind the door a stand of Osprey books stood, The left wall
had cabinets of lead historical miniatures, you had to ask the owner to get the
one you wanted out for you. To the right were wooden shelves with brightly
coloured books with dragons and such like on and boxed sets of grenadier and
citadel miniatures. Around the corner were racks of blister packs, yellow and
black for Grenadier that would become my first favorite but also the painted
picture packs from citadel. There was also Ral Patha and Metal Magic,
Alternative armies. I even bought a pack of Asgard dwarves from there.
The counter
ran in front of a wooden door I always imagined opened up onto a treasure trove
of Fantasy minis though I guess it was probably just the back room. They
specialised in army boxes, way out of my budget, so there were often people
much older than myself in there buying brown boxes with white labels on. I
thought it was cool and proudly carried my Guardroom Axle carrier bags round
town little realizing they were just my badge of geekdom. The place was dark and
to a 13 year old me mysterious and exciting, I loved it modern game shops seam
to be bright lights, clean furniture and corporate messages. In I believe the
late 90’s or early 2000’s it was sold to a chain and eventually it was no more.
So here is
to The Guardroom and all the other places just like it. All just a piece of
social history now I guess.
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
Erny's lead pile dip Number 1: Marauder Sea Elves.
Here I
review the ever wonderful Marauder sea elves. I had planned to only include
painted minis in my posts but after taking some photos of my Sea Elf collection
some time ago and then several people expressing an interest I thought I’d post
them up. Then I thought it may be fun to periodically dip into that enormous
lead pile of mine for a semi-regular mini-mini review 80’s style.
As far as I
know these are all the variants of the Marauder Sea Elves produced, although
some numbers appear to be missing. There are in total, archers, spearmen, one
sword armed leader type, one bow armed leader type and three Sea Elf War
Dancers. For those interested in the 3rd
ed army lists these figures make great Kith, Merchant Companies and Sea Elves.
They are
your regulation 28mm 80’s elves and mix well with citadels offerings of the
time and would also be fine with the early to mid 90’s elves. They have the
normal cartoony look of marauder miniatures from this period with a good amount
of detail for rank and file. Different sea creatures adorn their armour which
is a great touch and clearly marks them as different to the 80’s marauder high
elf line, the woodies being very different.
The poses
for the spear armed elves are nothing special, standing at ease waiting for the
action to begin. Though I must confess I'm in two minds as to whether S.E.13 is a spear elf or a War Dancer.
The archers again are a standard pose, clearly in the process of
firing/loading.
The War Dancers are in more dynamic poses, appropriately buckles
are being swashed here.
All in all a very nice set, if you could buy them today I’d give them a solid 7/10 but being quite rare though available on Ebay I’m bumping them to 8/10 for just being different or cool.
So what’s
next? More marauder 80’s elves or
something completely different? If it was a range out in the late 80’s from
Citadel or Marauder there is a fair chance I’ve got some of them.
Thursday, 16 August 2012
More free fantasy card buildings.
Card buildings, card stock buildings, paper or paper stock buildings, call them what you will. Here I present another building for you to use in you games of warhammer, old hammer or any fantasy battle or rpg game. They are totally free so please download.
This time we have a bigger building (on two pages of card) that could be an Inn if you so desired. I’ve tried a little extra black ink shading/texture this time, let me know if this is an improvement. There are a number of optional shutters for the windows, an out house that should fit to any of the currently posted buildings and some Inn signs.
My original
idea for the signs was to hand draw half then copy and flip the other half but
because the position of scanning wasn’t parallel to the direction of drawing
they have come out a little wonky. They should still work if instead of scoring
and folding you cut them, stick the signs so the match up and trim the white
from the post ends.
Attaching
the signs shouldn’t be a problem either score a slit in the wall you wish to
attach the sign to and slide it in or don’t stick the final part of the post,
open it out as tabs and glue it on. Ask an adult for help with any cutting!!!
The new
building can be found here:
and
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B4jjV9aHtYGdTC1yMjlhMEU5SzA
The
previous two can be found here:
Tuesday, 14 August 2012
The battle of the Manling Fields part 3
The great
bolt throwers fired once more but the explosion of the cannon must have unnerved
the crew. They both missed and the rat horde went unscathed. The crossbows
faired better, raining death upon the main rat horde, enough that they wavered
for a moment before their Warlord reasserted what passed for discipline in
their ranks. Still the mass of vermin in
that unit out numbered Lord Brouhahas unit of warriors, still they came ever
closer.
On the
right, supposedly refused flank the rat horde came on a pace, a fusillade from
the remaining Thunderers did little to slow their pace. Perhaps there would be
time for one more volley before the ratmen would be in a position to charge the
flank held by five lone dwarves.
The
Magician Small Daniels found within him the courage to run forward and calling
forth the magic contained within an ancient ring cast a spell upon the
scuttling soldiers of the rat warlord. “You’ll like this, not a lot!” he cried
at the slavering foe, arcane energies engulfed the main swarm weakening their
resolve. “Now that’s magic!”, Small Daniels cried with triumph but the cries
were too soon. With some obscene force of will the Skaven cleared their minds
of the decrepit magicians influence.
With a chittering roar the clan moulder beast handlers let their Rat Ogres go. The monstrous abominations charged straight for the diminutive dwaven wizard. Staring wide eyed at the awful doom that approached Small Daniels hitched his robes up around his waist to reveal two pasty spindly legs. Those legs now carried him screaming back to the dwarven lines, “D’Bieeeee!” he cried to his demonic paramour as he raced past a unit of crossbow dwarves.
To the east
the rat skirmishers attempted to hit the hovering gyrocopter with their slings.
All the shot flew wide of the mark but it woke the idling gyrocopter pilot. Perhaps
their was more he could do than just keep track of the eastern flank.
Wednesday, 8 August 2012
The battle of the Manling Fields part 2.
Lord Brouhaha watched impatiently as the war
machines and missile troops of his war band took up position and the gyrocopter probed the vermin flanks. Those rats were
fast, he wanted lead and steel tipped shafts raining down on them as soon as
possible but he held his tongue. More haste less speed he reminded himself, a
dwarf may do a job slowly but it is done efficiently and only needs doing once.
Just then
as if to taunt him from a hill beyond the Skaven lines came the crack of firing
weapons. Infernal machines spat wapstone death and several warriors in the
Lords own retinue fell from the mortal coil into the welcoming arms of their
ancestors. To the right many more of the red coated clansmen met a similar
doom. Loosing all patients Lord Brouhaha shouted, “get roaring Mug firing or I’ll
be loading it with your heads!”
The rats
were getting ever closer and, ”BOOM!” the dwarven great cannon, it’s lips licked
by flame and soot shot a great iron ball straight at the vermin lines. It tore
through the lumbering form of a rat ogre as though it were paper and bursting
through the largest rat unit scattered so many rat to the four winds. Roaring
Mug had spoken.
Agnetha and Anni-Frid
join the hum of their harp like bow strings to the throaty roar of the cannon
even as the crossbows sung as the choir. Bolts large and small ripped through the rat
swarm dwindling the Rat leader’s pack to roughly half its size. A vast arcane
totem spread resolve into the thumping hearts of the skaven, they held when
they should have run. To the right the thunderers opened up at extreme range but
only a single rat on the flank fell.
On came the
hoard as fast as ever. The warpstone once more shot across the battle field
this time smashing into the ranks of thunderers reducing them to half strength
in the blink of an eye. The refused flank now look in peril of being caught and
turned.
Concern now
filled Lord Broughaha’s heart. He called to the clans men to reposition themselves,
to turn to present a threat towards the right flank. The on rush of rats was so
fast, they would be here soon. “Fire!” he shouted to the cannon once more. The
gunners obeyed. They had not had time to bring up enough water to quench
Roaring Mug, nor to measure out the accurate loads of powder they normally used.
They just obeyed guessing the charge and ramming the ball down the hot barrel.
The bombardier touched his match to the fire hole and in a ball of flame
Roaring Mug exploded.
Friday, 3 August 2012
Another free oldhammer building
OK so I've not done anything cleaver here just made the shack longer but it's another house. We'll have a village soon.
Please feel free to download from here: Longer old hammer house.
Please feel free to download from here: Longer old hammer house.
The house that Erny built.
So after putting the little hut out only the other day I've had a great response already. Clearly I'm not as barmy as I thought and simple hand drawn card terrain has a place in the modern wargames world, if only a little place.
The I though, I hope the thing goes together! So last night in about ten minutes I printed, cut, scored and stuck. Ta-Da! (As my 1.5 year old would say).
Not to shabby for free I guess they need the white scored edges lining with markers but still I'm pleased particularly for the effort. It also looks sort of like the inspiration too.
I need to put more tabs on, sticking would have been difficult with just the ones I drew. The texture of the walls needs, well, doing. I need to spend more time doing the shading. I'll try harder next building, I have plans but any requests, to fit on 1 A4 sheet?
The I though, I hope the thing goes together! So last night in about ten minutes I printed, cut, scored and stuck. Ta-Da! (As my 1.5 year old would say).
Not to shabby for free I guess they need the white scored edges lining with markers but still I'm pleased particularly for the effort. It also looks sort of like the inspiration too.
I need to put more tabs on, sticking would have been difficult with just the ones I drew. The texture of the walls needs, well, doing. I need to spend more time doing the shading. I'll try harder next building, I have plans but any requests, to fit on 1 A4 sheet?
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
Oldhammer buildings for all!
After a brief discussion over IP mention was made about the lack of old style cardboard houses in current production. I love Dave Graffam's buildings and have loads but some how they just don't work for the old school feel.
Perhaps like me you have the old boxed scenarios with the original card buildings but don't want to cut the ancient cardboard. Sure you could scan them, I know they can even be found on line. But the point about the discussion was about having something current free of any IP issues.
So remembering the old card buildings I used to draw with felt tip I figured how hard could it be these days with computers. An hour or so later of much fun and I bring you Erny's first Warhammer house. Its a little shack really nothing super special but a fun start.
If you like it let me know, down load it here, use it. I plan to make more I really enjoyed tonight's drawing and colouring in and I'm sure I can do better. At the moment it is just a .jpg but if you print from just MS paint with the margins off and paper set to a4 it comes out the size drew it.
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