chalklands
Sergeant First Class
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2007
- Messages
- 1,198
Pete, that's a fantastic dio. I have always hoped someone like JJD would lend his talents to this particular episode. William Wollen did a painting of the incident called 'Last Stand of the 44th Regiment at Gandamak, 1842'. It is one of my favorite paintings and I have a large, framed print of it on my wall. -- Al
John could well do this episode on a limited number of figures basis like his Snowshoes, Gordon of Khartoum, or Leuthen series. He could even do a base for the figures. Maybe a couple of dozen 44th Ft., with a few Afghans thrown in for effect. ^&grin -- AlHi Al,
Yes, I'm with you totally, if anybody could do this justice it would be John Jenkins. As fine as the resin figures are, only John could produce a series that exemplifies this engagement... thinking of the Poilu's and Snowshoes....
They are great in 1:54 scale, but if John did them in 1:30 scale they would be amazing! Thinking of the 'chunkiness' of the Poilu and Snowshoe figures (if that makes sense)
Pete
Pete,
thanks for showing us all this wonderful diorama, it looks so good, its like you are really there!!!
I do like it when makers make a set of figures that all can be combined into a grouping based on famous paintings, but so far, not many have done that with painted figures.
As I'm a painted, I have been able to produce a few sets on the Napoleonic ear, like Tradition of London's 'Retreat from Moscow' and Alexander's Toy Soldiers 'Steady the Fife & Drums' and 'Retreat to Corunna'
Well done, this must be the centrepiece of your collection?
JOhn
Fantastic Dio! Looks inrcredible. One question on the background. Any particular reason to have parts of the backdrop framed separately? Is it to match the rest of the display that has differently framed images in other levels?
Thanks for sharing...
Hi,
Me again!
If anybody is interested in this conflict, I can recommend two good books:
'Signal Catastrophe' by Patrick Macrory and 'Return of a King, The Battle For Afghanistan' by William Dalrymple.
Pete