Hello all, hope you are all keeping well. This is just a quickie to show you what I have been mucking about with. But first:
Hey look kids, it's the 90's!
So what have I been mucking about with?.
Here's some Knights having a bit of a charge about the place. 2mm is great for making realistic sized units
These are from the horse and musket range being used as ranked longbows.
Some leve foot. If I can put together another 3 or 4 of these units I reckon they will make an impressive battle line.
These smaller units are just about passable as hand gunners or crossbowmen.
Each base is 6cmx3cm to give some idea of size. Here's a comparison picture next to a 28mm mini:
'come on lads, we can take him'!!!
So why the sudden interest in 2mm. Well I was going through some older posts and I found a campaign I almost got around to starting, namely this:
......'till next time.......
Awesome work - as you say, 2mm allows real sized units. Look great.
ReplyDelete...and how the heck did I ever miss Lodestar? They're superb.
Yep it's weird, the smaller the scale the bigger the battle, I'm itching to get a table full together. Loadstar are one of my go to bands. They formed out of the ashes of Sensor if you remember them.
DeleteWow, you've been busy again Mr Sprinks - love the unit of knights
ReplyDeleteThanks mate, the Knights are my favourite too.
DeleteWell, reading the Title, I thought: "there must be a '0' missing after the '2'..." now my poor eyes are sure, no '0' missing. How could you see what you've painted ?
ReplyDeleteAnd by the way, never heart about Lodestar. .. I was too bus in the 90s to liste to music :) Interesting, thanks!
No problem sir, 2mm are certainly different to paint but very quick and fun in their own way. And surprisingly detailed too. The trick is in making the bases look like they show a large area of ground.
ReplyDelete