Le Capitaine 1805 Andrea Miniatures 90mm

planetFigure

Help Support planetFigure:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Edorta

A Fixture
Joined
May 6, 2011
Messages
6,098
Location
Donostia- San Sebastian
Hi to all, this is one of my latest in a big scale. It is a captain of hussars, 4th Regiment, elite company, France. The figure is made by Andrea Miniatures and is perfectly casted and the assembly is easy, but it has a lot of work, because is better to paint the pieces first and then mount them all, especially the sabretache and saber.
Painted using acrylics, all comments welcome.

Military miniatures painted by Eduardo Garcia
 

Attachments

  • CapHusar1.jpg
    CapHusar1.jpg
    109.2 KB
  • CapHusar2.jpg
    CapHusar2.jpg
    102.7 KB
  • CapHusar3.jpg
    CapHusar3.jpg
    107.6 KB
  • CapHusar5.jpg
    CapHusar5.jpg
    105.4 KB
amazing work.
I always lost some paint with glueing pieces together. So I assemble as much as I can.
Any recommadations or a how to by painting and assembling first??

Marc
 
amazing work.
I always lost some paint with glueing pieces together. So I assemble as much as I can.
Any recommadations or a how to by painting and assembling first??

Marc

Hi Marc, as you can see the pelisse covers the attachment of sabretache and sable, so I paint those pieces first, I always use nails glued to the parts, to fix all the pieces, head, arms etc, it is more secure and allows to hold the pieces from those nails to paint them. You can drill a hole to introduce a nail made of steel, iron, copper or brass.
For example, this musket in 54mm. I used a piece of wire glued to the butt, I can hold it using a clothes peg and handle it cosily to paint it, in this case, the musket is glued to a drilled hole, made in the ground, and glued at the same time to a hand of the figure, so we have two attachment points.
Sometimes, depending of the figure you can assembly all the pieces first and then paint them , but the most of the time is necessary to left some pieces apart, for example the figures at horses. Me too, I prefer to assembly the most I can before painting.

Military miniatures painted by Eduardo Garcia

Fusil.jpg
 
Hi Marc, as you can see the pelisse covers the attachment of sabretache and sable, so I paint those pieces first, I always use nails glued to the parts, to fix all the pieces, head, arms etc, it is more secure and allows to hold the pieces from those nails to paint them. You can drill a hole to introduce a nail made of steel, iron, copper or brass.
For example, this musket in 54mm. I used a piece of wire glued to the butt, I can hold it using a clothes peg and handle it cosily to paint it, in this case, the musket is glued to a drilled hole, made in the ground, and glued at the same time to a hand of the figure, so we have two attachment points.
Sometimes, depending of the figure you can assembly all the pieces first and then paint them , but the most of the time is necessary to left some pieces apart, for example the figures at horses. Me too, I prefer to assembly the most I can before painting.



Thanks Eduardo.
I also pin as much as i can. Sometimes, it doesn't fit excactly as it whas unpainted, and then the mess begin. Paint is coming off, glue is running where it not should be etc.
Therefore I assemble most at the time the whole figure before painting. I'm very pleased to read that you do the same.

I think Jason is right. .... the moustache is upside down.

Marc
 
Nice work, particularly the gold lace! The mustache looks a bit odd though. Is it perhaps upside down?

Jason

I think you're right,(y) the upturned position brought by the tips of the mustache confused me, and I thought it was the right one, I had to put it in its direction and then bend the tips upwards.

Military miniatures painted by Eduardo Garcia
 
Im really glad to see how you've made this peice. Thanks for sharing your tips on the build.

Cheers

Huw
 
Splendid work on the gold lace, I started painting this kit several years ago but gave up due to the complexity, theirs only so many tiny details I can paint before my patience goes into melt-down!
 
Back
Top