Douglas Miniatures Logo

Douglas Miniatures Logo

Saturday, 21 February 2026

Plastics in Action

 Having spent a fair bit of time renovating the plastic battalions, I thought it would be good to test them out on the table.  The idea was that a French Corps would probe forward and attempt to force a river crossing to allow the main army to advance deeper into enemy territory.  In an attempt to prevent this  an Austrian Corps has deployed along the river, covering the various crossing points.

The Austrians are strung out along the river bank, occupying villages and woods, seen here as french cavalry probe forward:

The French plan was to feint on the Austrian left and push across the two fords on the Austrian right.  french cavalry and artillery move forward to occupy high ground that dominates the river valley:
A French division arrives to force the two crossings.  The troops are mostly Airfix French:
The game was being played with Command and Colors rules and like most battles, the French plan did not survive first contact with the enemy.  The French did not have a single card for their left, and so the action switched to the right, which was to be a feint. A spirited French attack against the Austrian left saw the defence crumble:
Austrian light infantry were evicted from a wood and an infantry battalion collapsed under pressure.  Suddenly the whole Austrian left was in disaray.

The French supported by cavalry quickly cross the river and the Austrian commander, feeling that he had done his duty in delaying the French decides to withdraw; his forces being too widely dispersed along the river.

The troops looked good and it was quite a spectacle seeing them set up on the table.



Thursday, 19 February 2026

Camels and Fokkers

 Phil vcame to visit me for a couple of days and we were able to get some troops on the table for a game or two. Just for fun we tried out a World War 1 air combat game.  We used rules from the 'Portable Colonial Wargame' book, slightly adapted for our needs.  We changed the firing from 3 dice per gun to just one dice.  That was because the Germans shot down all of the British aircraft on the first move! The other thing we did was moving single aircraft alternatively, although we need some markers so that we knew which aircraft had moved that turn. A final change was that ones an aircft had started to move the player was not allowed to retrace the move to get a better firing angle, This worked well as estimating where, after 12 moves/turns, the aircraft would finish up.  We had several occasions where aircraft overshot or did not finish up in the correct position to take a shot.

We played the game on a 3" hex mat with six aircraft each.  The dogfights were chaotic with aircraft peeling off in all direction:

A camel arrives at the wrong angle an misses the green and red Fokker.

Aircraft all over the place and the Red Baron has a Camel on his tail!
The aircraft models are all Lledo 'Pioneers of the Air' WW1 fighters.  These were purchases from eBay for a few pounds and a box of clear plastic stands came from the same source.  Having enjoyed the game, I plane to find a better hex mat that will show off the aircraft better; the Camels are quite hard to spot on the WW1 battlefield mat.

Friday, 13 February 2026

Hinchliffe British Fusiliers

 It may be recalled that I had decided to refurbish a group of Hinchliffe 25mm British Fusiliers. The job is now complete and these fine looking troops can take to the field.  The standard bearers are converted musketeers, having had damaged weapons.  The drummer is the same, with a drum scrounged from a Russian figure.  The officer needed a new sword, sourced from a bean can lid.

This is what they were like prior to painting.  The picture was taken before I found a Hinchliffe officer.  In the photo a Lamming officer is in command:


Here is the finished unit:

These will go off to join Phil's collection, which consists of early Hinchliffe figures.



Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Personality Figures

 Two more personalities join their armies. The first is a Minifigs 25mm model of Marshal Murat in one of his more flamboyant outfits.  I put him on a Hinchliffe horse as I am not too keen on Minifigs mounts:

The second figure is a Hinchliffe model of Prussian General Gneisenau, in contrast wearing a rather drab uniform:

I do enjoy painting these personality figures, there's quite a bit of research regarding the uniforms and it is fun painting a single model.


Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Atlantic 1/72 Egyptian Chariots

 I have been working on these chariots on and off for a few weeks and last night I finally completed 10 of them.  It was quite a complex task, as although plenty of crews are provided, the small chariot crew compartment will only hold one figure.  I had to cut the bases of the crew figures down to a slither and squeezed them in.

I have a box of Egyptian infantry, also by Atlantic and I may paint and base these indue course.

An enjoyable little project: