Thursday 10 March 2016

Some sneaky Sardinians

Sneaky because somehow they managed to jump into the painting queue without being planned for. Since I ordered the cavalry from Lancashire Games I've been thinking that it probably wouldn't take me too long to get them painted. I could probably just sneak them in before I get into the Craig's figures without setting myself back too much. And I was right. Three evenings' work, which included having to repaint their greatcoats because I painted them dark blue instead of blue-grey.
The Granatieri di Sardegna
The Cacciatori di Sardegna
Artillery in campaign dress.
The Sardinians - eager to make their mark in the Crimea
The figures are not actually Sardinians. They are French from the long-since revamped Lancashire Games range which I acquired second hand. But the uniforms are practically identical in cut to the French. I had seen an image of the Sardinian Grenadiers with epaulettes, so went with that. My understanding is that the ordinary line had no shoulder decorations. I don't know if the Cacciatori even went to the Crimea, but I like the green epaulettes, so as far as I'm concerned, they were there!

So why didn't I just paint them as French? Well I have French for the Franco-Prussian War to pant in blue coats and red trousers, and I have World War One French to paint in blue coats and red trousers, so I just felt like something different would look nice in the cabinets.

OK, I better go and paint what I was meant to paint this week.

Nate

11 comments:

  1. Sneaky, but very well painted.

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    1. Thank you Michael. The Crimean War stuff is 'quick and nasty' blacklining, so quality of painting is definitely not as important as the quantity produced!

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  2. Looking very nice too Nate!

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  3. Your Sardinians almost started a mutiny on your work bench, but you saved the day by painting lovely uniforms on them! :o)

    cheers,

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    1. Thanks Phil. I hope they fight the Russians as well as they cause trouble for neatly planned schedules!

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  4. Your Sardinians look no worse for the double coat, coat. On some figures, the distinction between wearing the dark blue tunic and the blue-grey greatcoat is slight. These lads are clearly wearing the greatcoat.

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    1. Yes, probably a bit greyer than I'd hoped, but still in the blue spectrum.It was a bit annoying not being able to paint cuffs on them. For a mid-nineteenth century army, they are a bit bland. I'll forgive them if they fight well.

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    2. I bit bland but it helps to put them in their white trousers. They wore white pants in 1859. Were white trousers available during the Crimean War too?

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