BarleyBop
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2022
- Messages
- 11
Hey all.
My main focus is vehicles from all sides used in North Africa WW2 campaigns... but for every vehicle, it seems there is a figure, or 2, or 3!
Recently, I've been on an Italian kick: and I thought Brits had reputation for eccentric vehicles!
This fella has helped me work on non-caucasian skin tones, and is representative of the thousands of 'colonials' that got swept into the fray.
He still needs a matte varnish, but time to move onto the next ones and see what they have to teach me!
He is from an ICM kit, 'Eritrean battalions of the Italian Colonial Army'
They were mostly outfitted with WW1 weapons, often barefoot, and like this guy, sporting leather 'gators' to protect against arid thorny scrub.
Where is his pack? I read that having been recruited from the warrior class, it was beneath them to carry their own kit, traditionally having someone else to haul it for them!
It is slow learning, but I think he turned out much better than my first attempt (at a mounted Tuareg) several years ago shortly after a 35 year hiatus... I did have fun modifying the saddle and adding my own touches with fabric, and a camel tail plucked from a Labrador Retriever
My main focus is vehicles from all sides used in North Africa WW2 campaigns... but for every vehicle, it seems there is a figure, or 2, or 3!
Recently, I've been on an Italian kick: and I thought Brits had reputation for eccentric vehicles!
This fella has helped me work on non-caucasian skin tones, and is representative of the thousands of 'colonials' that got swept into the fray.
He still needs a matte varnish, but time to move onto the next ones and see what they have to teach me!
He is from an ICM kit, 'Eritrean battalions of the Italian Colonial Army'
They were mostly outfitted with WW1 weapons, often barefoot, and like this guy, sporting leather 'gators' to protect against arid thorny scrub.
Where is his pack? I read that having been recruited from the warrior class, it was beneath them to carry their own kit, traditionally having someone else to haul it for them!
It is slow learning, but I think he turned out much better than my first attempt (at a mounted Tuareg) several years ago shortly after a 35 year hiatus... I did have fun modifying the saddle and adding my own touches with fabric, and a camel tail plucked from a Labrador Retriever
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