For the Toy theme I have to go back to one of my earliest memories, I was about three years old and my mum was pulling my fingernails off one by one while telling me each time" this isn't going to hurt" followed by her yanking off each fingernail! This wasn't an example of sadism but a rather an aspect of a skin disease which meant if you stuck a plaster on my skin, when you took it off it ripped off a layer of skin, this resulted in me losing most of the skin off my hands and my nails catching on virtualy everthing , causing me pain as the nerves still worked! So it was for the best but I guess I've probably got trust issues? What it did mean was I couldnt play with anything hard, like say Lego or blocks or the like, but I pinched a melamine covered board and on that I was able to make things out of plastecine, a modeling clay that I found quite soothing. I built volcanoes and black and white aliens , it was at this point I aquired a book that I realise now must have been my dads but from that day was mine and which I still have, a 1960s coffee table book on uniforms from the French revolution up until the start of WW1 in mostly original prints.
The book gave me a myriad of subjects to make , I copied uhlans, Sardinians and all sorts of weird and wonderful soldiers, it's the book that got me hooked on making soldiers from a very early age, before I could read I was trying to make a czapka! In addition to the original prints there were photos, all in colour , of French soldiers of the first empire, which I found fascinating, I wanted to know who and what everyone in all the pictures were, I now do but it's taken a fair amount of time! The first page was a painting by baron Lejune, a Napoleonic French officer and painter , the painting of Borodino has a wealth of detail!
There was one print that made a particular impact, a grumpy looking chap with a blue coat and fur hat, a grenadier of the Imperial Guard as I now know, so I present in 28mm the second battalion of the grenadiers of the Imperial Guard of the first empire of France.
Lovely Perry metal figures, this unit completes my Imperial Guard for now, all units in metal and in this one case full price as I'm such a cheapskate! Excellent flag by GMB.
24 x 5 is 120 plus 50 theme points make 170
All the best
Iain














Nicely done Iain
ReplyDeleteThanks very much Paul!
DeleteBest Iain
Wow, your early childhood sounds very traumatic and challenging, Iain, though you seemed to have preserved quite well. I have a copy of that book and it is a prized part of my book collection. By complete fluke, Sarah and I saw an exhibit of Baron Lejeune's paintings at Versailles a few years back - fascinating and wonderful. Fabulous work on the Grenadiers - the ultimate Napoleonic heavy hitters. They look magnificent.
ReplyDeleteThanks Curt, yeah it could only get better, the exhibition sounds great!
DeleteBest Iain
Magnificent Grenadier unit. So much detail.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much Tom!
DeleteBest Iain
Well done Iain, I'm with you in loving the look of the Imperial Guard
ReplyDeleteThanks, cant go wrong?
DeleteBest Iain
A fantastic looking unit, well done.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Stuart!
DeleteBest Iain
I’m with you on those old uniform books. Great looking grognards
ReplyDeleteTheyre great books, thanks Peter!
DeleteBest Iain
Very nice painted "grognards"!
ReplyDeleteNice work, Iain!
ReplyDelete