Sunday 28 December 2014

Guards! Guards!

Next up are the Prussian Foot Guards.


Before repainting. A sturdy looking set of PN 13: Prussian Guard Grenadiers, Charging.
PN 13 from the rear
Stripping off the paint revealed that all was not quite as it seemed! About half a dozen of them were clearly not original Hinton Hunts.


Mystery figure on the left, Hinton Hunt on the right. The mystery figure has slightly less detail and is made of a darker, less dense alloy. His stance is also slightly set back, as if balancing on his right foot.


HH on the right. Definitely a bit beefier.


There are also slight differences in the thickness of the bases and the mold lines. The mold line variation is clearest on the boots.
I'm almost certain that the mystery figures were made by Der Kriegspielers (DK), an American company that produced a range of 25mm Napoleonics in the early 1970s. Marketed as "Napoleoniques", the DK range closely resembles those made by Hinton Hunt. According to the DK 1970 and 1973 catalogues (here), the DK equivalent to my HH Prussian guardsmen are "Napoleoniques" set 121: Prussian Guard Battalion 1812 Advancing.

(Many thanks to Chuck for the catalogue information).

Another discovery was that the drummer I had selected  was a conversion. So much became clear when his head fell off as I was cleaning him! However, a pin and a bit of superglue soon put him right again. I suspect he is a PN 6 (Prussian Line Infantry Drummer), with a Guardsman's head.


PN 6 with a new head. Not an easy figure to paint. Much of the detail is paint rather than sculpting, and the drum was anything but symmetrical.


Side view, looking very spiffy with his poppy red facings and plume.
To finish the battalion I made another conversion to make the standard bearer: PN 5 Private, Prussian Line Infantry, advancing (Separate Musket), but with another Guardsman's head. I thought it would also be fun to have a go at hand-painting the flag. The final result, representing the First Battalion/First Garde-Regiment zu Fuss, is shown below.
PN 13; PN 10: Guard Officer Charging; converted PN 6: Line Drummer; and converted PN 5: Line Infantryman.









I've yet to decide whether or not to stick with this basing scheme, but we'll see how it goes. It certainly makes it a lot easier to pick them up and move them around.

WM

6 comments :

  1. I for one like the basing you are using - a real old school look.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Another excellent unit, making me think about sorting out some Prussians in 2015. Like the flag.

    Paul

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm not sure that you could get printed flags in the 60s, so I felt compelled to have a go. The wife says she it looks like an ink plot test!

      Delete
    2. Often, in the sixties the 'Good Old Boys' who used Hintons would make flags out of brass sheet soldered to a brass pole, then bent around and then painted. they generally made them oversized too!
      The rest of us used paper and drew the flag with a pen and then coloured it.
      Roy

      Delete
    3. By the way, stunning paint job on that drummer. What paints do you use. The opacity of your white stripes is excellent.
      R

      Delete
    4. Hi Roy. The paints are humbrol enamels from top to toe. Truth be told, the whites and the yellows don't always go on that well and generally require two or more coats.

      Delete