Old Russian Warrior - Author Sculpt Miniatures Review

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Guy

A Fixture
Joined
Aug 20, 2003
Messages
12,741
Location
US, Oklahoma
Item Number - AS001-54Z
Old Russian Warrior, 14th Century
54mm resin
17 resin parts
Sculpted by Sergey Zlobov

gal0-1.jpg

Alot of us have been patiently waiting for the Russian Sculpters who kept Seil Miniatures supplied with so many beautiful figures and now the time has come and I have recieved their first release of many to come.

Old Russian 01.JPG

Arriving in the mail after 7 days shipping the kit was packaged in what looks to be like a book. Easy to stand on its end like above or to be stacked on its side.

Old Russian 02.JPG

Laying the box on its side and breaking the seal I discovered a photo card of the sculpted figure and the first layer of bubble wrap.

Old Russian 03.JPG

Inside were 2 sealed bags containing parts for the horse and for the figure.

Old Russian 04.JPG

Old Russian 05.JPG

Above you see the box as it was opened for the first time.

Old Russian 06.JPG

Above are the two bags of sealed parts that were sandwiched between layers of bubble wrap.

Parts 01.JPG

Above are the parts of the figure as they came out of the bag.

Parts 3.JPG

Above are the parts of the horse along with the resin base.

The Figure

Figure 01.jpg Figure 02.JPG

Figure 03.JPG Figure 04.JPG

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Figure 05.JPG Figure 06.JPG

Above are the separate cast arms attached to the mold block.

Figure 07.JPG Figure 08.JPG

Figure 09.JPG Figure 10.JPG

Above you see the front and back view of the sword and axe.

Figure 11.JPG Figure 12.JPG

Figure 13.JPG Figure 14.JPG

Above are the front and back views of the shield and banner that attaches to the spear.

Figure 15.JPG Figure 16.JPG

Figure 17.JPG

Above is the bow in its case and the quiver at the bottom.

Figure 18.JPG

Above is the resin base furnished with the kit.

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The Horse

Horse 01.JPG Horse 02.JPG

Horse 03.JPG Horse 05.JPG

Above is 1/2 of the horse with the head. You can see the female holes for assembling the horse. The mold blocks should come off easy with a jewelers saw and then sanded.

Horse 07a.JPG Horse 09.JPG

Horse 08.JPG

Above you see the second 1/2 of the horse with corresponding pegs for assembly alignment. The bottom photo show the horse half from the top to show you how straight the seam is when the two 1/2's are joined.

Close ups
Horse

Horse 10.JPG Horse 11.JPG

Horse 12.JPG

Horse 14.JPG

Above you see some close ups of the detail Sergey has sculpted into the horse.

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Horse 15.JPG

Above is the separate cast saddle attached to a mold block.

Horse 18.JPG Horse 19.JPG

Horse 20.JPG

Above is the beautifully sculpted detailed tail which fits snuggly into the rear locater hole.

Additional Photographs

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Conclusion:
This is by far one of the finest figure kits I have seen in years. Much better casted than by Seil and Sergey's attention to detail is awesome. Some mold block clean-up needed and sanding afterwards. Extremely recommended!!!

Author Sculpt web-site
click here

R238
 
Thats indeed a crispy and awesome casting.
I would now, is the resin a soft or hard. In the past i had a melting problem in my drybox with a resin that became soft. It destroyed my figure.
Hope this one is harder, or i put a smaller lamp then 60 W in it.

Marc
 
That is such a fantastic piece of casting, :eek:the figure and horse are awesome, I will definately be having one of these, many thanks for the review Guy
Cheers
Tommi
 
Thats indeed a crispy and awesome casting.
I would now, is the resin a soft or hard. In the past i had a melting problem in my drybox with a resin that became soft. It destroyed my figure.
Hope this one is harder, or i put a smaller lamp then 60 W in it.

Marc

Thanks Marc,

I would be careful with putting this in a drying box. At least lower your watt bulb to a smaller one and keep an eye out on the casting as you dry it. In some places (mane and tail) the resin is pretty thin.
 
Very clever and well executed packaging (that's the graphic designer in me talking). Looks like a very well done figure. The mold plug on the head of the axe looks tricky but over all, clean and VERY well sculpted piece. Thanks for sharing guy!

Jay H.
OKC
 
Guy,

Thank you for the review...I think I'm in love with this figure. And I am now beginning to understand how others wind up with the perverbial grey army. I may need to pick one of these up and put in on the shelf until my painting skill level can do this amazing work of sculpting proper justice.

-Julia
 
Well boys and girls, I got to see this one in the flesh over at Guy's place just yesterday and I have to admit, it's a BEAUTY! The casting is impecable, the sculpting is top notch and fit and finish is perfect. I don't think anyone would be dissapointed with one of these kits!

Jay H.
OKC
 
Hello Guy,
I hope you are still in touch with this post?
I chose this figure as my very first figure and it's sitting on my desk at home waiting to be assembled. Have I been a bit ambitious?
Any hints on reference material for colour schemes?
Cheers from Oz
 
Hello Alexandros!
Please look many illustrations here:

http://www.modelsculpt.org/forum/viewtopic.php? t=489&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=15

Also I used a picture from the book "Horsemen of war", and some additional images.
Yours faithfully, I hope these colour illustrations will help to choose colour for a figure.
 

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Hello Guy,
I hope you are still in touch with this post?
I chose this figure as my very first figure and it's sitting on my desk at home waiting to be assembled. Have I been a bit ambitious?
Any hints on reference material for colour schemes?
Cheers from Oz

Yes, i think you are a little bit to ambitious:eek:.
But you gotta start with something.
Now, seriously....if this is your very first figure ever i would go for a more easyer figure and save this one for later.

marc
 
Hi my friend Marc!
Once I have asked the friend to the artist:
- "it is necessary to paint with What colour the horseman?",
he has answered so:
- " It is necessary to paint a horse in" horse colour ", it is necessary to paint iron with" iron paints ", and it is necessary to paint a skin (person) in" colour of a skin "!." :) :)
 
Thanks for the replies folks. Those are great images Zlobov*s and will definitely help.
Any suggestions on a good medieval or ancient figure to start with and what scale would be best?
I look at the size of a 54mm figure and I look at some of the artistry produced by people on figures of that scale and I'm just amazed at the detail! Maybe I should start with something 75mm or greater?
cheers
 

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