Something unexpected today!
A few months ago I was lured into this new project by a group of fellow fools which enthusiastically committed to build up a tiny force -and eventually even get to play!
Then the lockdown loomed upon all of us and of course, as it tends to happen with these group projects, it all got stagnated until today. But hey, now that at least I got my bunch of minis painted, I thought I could show some pics.
You can find the rules here. It's a pretty narrative oriented game, in which you take control of a Knight and a small retinue and get to live adventures and encounters. The background is wide open, so it's not specifically oriented towards the Arthurian Legend, despite the title. You can perfectly set it in the ambientation of your choice -though, of course, it works better on the low fantasy side of the things, with a knight errant taking quests and fighting for honour and virtue.
Let's move on the minis. After some debate, we agreed to use Valdemar Miniatures for the project. It was challenging, as they are 1/72 (roughly 20mm) scale, which is most definitely out of my comfort zone. But precisely there was the carrot for me. 1/72 it was then.
As you will immediately see, the minis are amazing. Incredibly detailed. Not 'incredibly detailed for 20mm minis'; they are awesome in absolute terms. More than many 28mm minis. The variety of the ranges is sweet and you have anything you need to create any kind of medieval vignette imaginable. Just have a look at the link above and judge by yourself.
Stretching it to my particular project, the challenge consists of a knight errant, a squire, a retinue of men-at-arms and a monster. Absolute freedom of choice within those categories, but that's what we all agreed to do. Let's get started then:
The Knight Errant
I needed two versions, a mounted knight and a foot one. I got these:
Awful, overexposed pic |
Awful, overexposed pic, but on foot |
They were not exactly the same mini, but the differences were minor, I could make this work.
Head swap on one, sculpted mail on the other... |
This should be enough |
They are not 100% exact replicas, but at this scale it was more than enough to make them look as two versions of the same knight. Time to splash some paint!
Basic livery |
The fresh shield is for the mounted knight; the worn out one for the dismounted version |
The loyal horse also needed the same treatment |
This is my first experiment with yellow Contrast paint (everybody was talking about them, I had to give them a try!) and I have to say it worked much better than expected. It solved me the whole shading work and just had to focus on highlights. Point to GW, render unto Caesar.
I made some different quick designs to decide over the heraldry.
In the end I used a mix of A and C |
See, the drangon from A |
This took some time |
Yet some more time! |
Then the checkers from C |
Could you imagine me doing a project without checkers? |
I say no. Not on this blog |
Just a close-up of my insanity |
Time consuming and pretty exhausting, but the model deserves it, trust me.
Almost there |
Let's hope I can glue it this way and it resists! |
This is the final result on both:
I'm happy with them, specially considering the scale. So it was time to move along...
The Squire
This mini was meant to be simpler than his master, both in design and livery terms. I got a mini bearing a banner, which I thought fitted the subject.
Quite a simple surcoat and no fuss about this one |
The squire still has to earn a heraldry of his own, but his shield could still show something that tied him to his knight, so this is what I did:
Checkers. More checkers. Hahaha (maniac laughter) |
This is the basic thing, bearing his lord's banner:
I had to sculpt that thumb. The tiniest thing I've ever sculpted |
The final pics:
Alongside his master:
Well, it looks like we have the core of something. Now it is time to muster the troops...
The men-at-arms
The rules of The Dolorous Stroke are designed for a group of 4-5 miniatures, I think. But once I got all these minis... you know. These things happen.
I had to paint them all. You would have done the same |
The short pikes (or are they long spears?) are 28mm spears. They fit in surprisingly well.
As opposite to the knight (and in lesser measure the squire), the men-at-arms were supposed to dress in a more simple way. Not a gaudy livery, but just earthy colours; unexpensive clothes for humble peasants.
Fifty shades of brown |
The restricted palette is a conscious decision, with the sole exception of the yellow sash, to tie in with the knight theme. In cases like these is when you realise you can never have enough tones of brown.
Why the lack of variety in weapons? |
They all have the long spear for one reason. They are not to fight some other knights for a piece of land. They will have to hunt and face...
The Monster
The archvillain will be this beast:
Growl |
A Hydra by Grenadier. Extremely beautiful, seriously.
And huge. I needed a CD as a base |
I think I've seen a lot of hydras in dark, cold tones. Greens and blues mostly. I wanted something different, something warm, so I tried brown. Brown and yellow would keep visual coherence within the whole project.
Contrast again. Time saving indeed |
However, I highlighted each and every scale, one by one. Four layers. Four f&# layers.
This is the second layer, I think |
I used Contrast again for the crest. I'm really making the most of these paints! |
Here it is. I used DAS for the base |
And this tiny branch I found on the park |
The problem is that the base is really huge and the hydra leaves a lot of open space at both sides. I needed something else. A pal from the group suggested me a corpse or someting like that.
Fortunately I had these |
Speed paint, I just wanted to have him finished |
Enough as a base filler |
The pose of this other one was just perfect for this |
Ouch. Blurry pic |
But you get the idea |
Sniff sniff |
So just have a few pics of the whole project:
We have been talking about adding some scenery, but I still don't have it. Until I wait for the rest to finish their projects I think I'll get a piece.
I've enjoyed this thoroughly. The change of scale and theme has been challenging, but refreshing. I really hope I have the chance to get a game with these anytime soon!
I have another medieval project pending (in fact I planned it like more than a year ago, sigh), so I'll see if I'm in the mood for keeping the knighthood-ish painting mojo!