Mentioned in previous posts, I jumped in on a Bolt Action escalation league a few months ago. The scale (as in the number of figures) and subject matter (WW2) is not the most appealing to me but I really wanted to support some kind of miniature league at Huntsville's new gaming store, Lucky Dice Cafe. Bolt Action was the first opportunity and I decided to roll with it. In retrospect, I am really glad I did because it has turned out very well and has been a lot of fun.
Rolling through the first month, I left myself in a bit of bind for trying to get my painting points in for the month. I managed to get 250 pts of veterans assembled very quickly so I could play but before I knew it I only had one week left to paint them. So a very interesting challenge presented itself to me: 14 figures in 7 days, something I have never even come close to accomplishing.
The first batch, 14 figs in 7 days. |
I'm not really the biggest fan of Warlord's miniatures, so this left me a lot of freedom to really try to push my painting speed since I was not overly concerned how good the final product looked. I just wanted them painted. It also forced me to really see how much "messiness" Army Painter's strong tone was could cover up. Overall, I'm pretty satisfied with the results given the time investment. The figures above eventually had some weathering powder applied to the base to shift the color a little bit. I also placed the weathering powder randomly to knees and elbows, as well as some other areas that "seemed" to make sense. All in all it was pretty interesting exercise but was a bit of painful, especially since my sweet spot for batch painting to be limited to just 3 figures!
I also tracked the actual hours for the figures above. All said, from not primed to sealed each model came in at about 2 hours. I was really hoping for a sub 1 hour mark.
Between the initial 250 pt mark for the league and the 1000 pt mark for the D-Day game, I really only managed to paint my Chaffee light tank and get some more guys assembled. This caused me to not get my painting points for the league for a couple of months.
I may have over chipped it. |
While I did not completely rectify the previous mistake of waiting till the last minute, I did at least realize more than week before I needed to knock out another significant batch of models. And my Greyhound scout car. So I didn't have 14 models to paint this time, I had 19! Plus the Greyhound! And only 2 weeks to do so.
Ugh, so many! |
We'll skip an up close shot of the Greyhound as I am not pleased with it currently. Like the Chaffee, it is also not completely "done." I'll eventually post some stuff up for them when I wrap them up.
Most interestingly, here I am at basically the half way point of the year and I've painted up 33 Bolt Action infantry figures. Combine that with the Menoth models I painted for Company of Iron and I'm at 43. My total for all of last year was just 36, so that has me feeling pretty good. That is until I think about all the other projects in the queue...
Anyway, the paints used for these guys:
- Pants: RMS Worn Olive (Base); No highlights
- Jacket: RMS Faded Khaki (Base); 1:1 RMS Faded Khaki:Bronzed Highlight (Highlight)
- Webbing: RMS Terran Khaki (Base); RMS Kahki Highlight (Highlight)
- Rifle-Steel: 1:1 RMS Pure Black:AP Gun Metal (Base); AP Shinning Silver (Highlight)
- Rifle-Stock: RMS Blackened Brown (Base); RMS Intense Brown (Highlight)
- Skin:
- Batch 1: RMS Bronzed Highlight (Base)
- Batch 2: RMS Bronzed Skin (Base)
- Helmet: RMS Olive Green (Base); 1:1 RMS Olive Green:RMS Pale Olive
- All shading was with diluted AP Strong Tone all over the model, some wiped away on highlight areas of the pants. A second application was done (after the first dried) in select/deeper areas.
Overall, pretty happy with how they turned out. The highlight's on the helmets are sometimes really off and also do not transition well but I'll try to correct that on subsequent figures. I should have been more careful in applying the Strong Tone wash. But, they are done. Eventually I will need to add my MMG teams and 1-2 squads to have a more robust 1000 pt list but I can at least move on to other things now and revisit this at a more relaxed pace.
Batch-painting 12+ figures is an important exercise, IMO. I think it helps develop a different mindset for painting, which a person can then apply to smaller-count projects. Like you said, you had less concern for precision. Those same techniques and mindset can translate to smaller-count projects and feel liberating. And speed up painting time for satisfactory results.
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