First of the Celts

I’m a 15mm gamer who plays To The Strongest competitions in 28mm…so although I have some 17 different Ancients/Medieval armies in 15mm, I only have two in 28mm: my 40-year-old, Minifigs Early Imperial Romans, and my two-year-old, Perry-medieval-plastic Venetians.

I’ve used the Romans a lot, and the Venetians even more, so have been thinking for some time that it’s now the moment to add another army to the roster…but which one?

It’s a big investment of both time and money, so it’s got to be an army that means something. There’s a tale behind the Romans (I won’t repeat it now as many of you know it already) and the Venetians began from a box-set I won at the Doubles a couple of years ago…so what was going to spark my interest for number three.

Well, my very first army ever was an Airfix Ancient Briton army that I used at school and university (when the lessons were taught in the original Latin!), and a couple of units of Celtic foot could be the starting point for any number of Gallic-style armies (Galatian, Gallic, Ancient British) or form a command for even more (e.g. Carthaginian or any other army in which the Celts served as mercenaries).

One problem: I didn’t fancy painting six deep units of warriors wearing checks, tartans or stripes, and whose shields were too intricate to be hand-painted and would thus require a whole load of transfers to have the bit for the bosses cut out with a ‘sharp craft knife’. Fortunately, Victrix have come to the rescue on that last one - now producing pre-punched transfers that make using them so much easier - and Weave of War, my new favourite wargames supplier, sell miniature, real-cloth cloaks that can be glued to the back of a figure and obviate the need for 360° painting: it’s always the join between the back and front of a stripey or chequered figure that cause the issues.

So Ancient British/generic Celts it was. Here’s the first unit, both a front and back view:

Victrix

The Victrix figures are absolutely lovely: highly, highly recommended. Yes, you have to build them, and that can be a bit fiddly, but once you get the knack of it, they go together very easily. I am a heathen and use superglue to fix, with either water or PVA applied just before pressing the two surfaces together to activate the glue (when I say water, I dip the surface to be glued into a small dish of the stuff; ditto with PVA).

Note that I didn’t bother to add any additional paraphernalia to the figures - no scabbards for example (confess, you didn’t notice, did you!) - as that’s just extra work for things that will be totally overshadowed by the shields and cloaks. I also made the decision to build the first unit from fully-clothed figures: I’ll save the topless and naked versions for veteran and fanatic units respectively.

They paint up beautifully, with the sculpts doing all the work of bringing out my rudimentary skills. I used Contrast paints for the base coats, and standard GQ acrylics for the highlights. I block painted the figures, then carefully drew stripes on their fronts and sides with a thin brush (with the cloaks, there was no need to do the stripes etc on the sides).

No need for too much accuracy on the stripes etc: there is so much going on with the figures in the unit (figure, cloak, shield) that just the impression of the stripes etc is enough. I didn’t both with stripes etc on the trousers for the same reason, although I will stripe the trousers on the topless lot when I come to do them.

LittleBigMan/Victrix Transfers

Shields ready for the transfers to be applied

The shields were painted and had the transfers attached before being attached to the figures. The method used was to cut the plastic sprues they came on so you can prepare the shields on the sprue; spray them white; paint the boss black and then bronze; touch up with white; apply the transfer; paint any non-transfer areas (the rim, the back) a wood colour. Very simple.

As for the transfers themselves, just follow the instructions that come in the packet. Now that they are pre-punched, the only annoying bit is having to carefully cut out each transfer…but this is ten thousand million times easier than doing the boss hole!

Weave of War Cloaks

Now available from Deadanddread Miniatures, the Weave of War cloaks are fantastic. They literally are little cut-out fabric cloaks that come all ready for attaching to your painted figures.

The cloaks come in three different sizes - in order, smallest to largest: battle, campaign, command - and there’s also a rolled up version as well. Loads of different colours, and can bought either in packets of eight in single designs (for that one-clan look) or mixed designs (what I used).

There are videos demonstrating how to attach the cloaks but, really, all you do is put a bit of glue on the straps that go over the shoulders, a blob of glue on the inside back just under the collar; leave to get tacky (do this: I found life a lot easier once I’d curbed my impatience and let the glue get properly tacky); and then pop the cloak on the figure, fold the straps over and done!

Once the glue is dry, you can then scrunch the cloak to get a bit of shaping, knowing that when you varnish the figure (I used a matt spray) the cloak will harden to being pleasingly stiff: like paper or cloth flags that have been covered in PVA, shaped and then left to dry.

One thing to note: when varnishing the unit, above, I got very careless and over-varnished the rear view. Nothing to do with the cloaks themselves, it was all me getting the spray can too close and for too long. It was dark, I was tired, Officer!

This left a clouded residue on the cloaks that I thought had ruined them, but then I remembered the advice I’d been given when a can of GW varnish (never buying GW varnish again: never) did the same thing even though I’d used it correctly: vinegar.

“Vinegar? Are you George Bernard?” you might exclaim but, yes, the cloaks in back rank of the picture above were cloudy to the point of being opaque until brushed with vinegar from the kitchen cupboard (expensive Apple Cider Vinegar, according to the wife, rather than the cheap stuff for chips but, I mean, “because you’re worth it” and all that!) which neatly brought the colours back out again. Phew!

In Conclusion…

I’m very happy with this unit and am actually looking forward to painting more. The products detailed above (the Victrix figures, Contract paints, LBMS transfers, the Weave of War cloaks) really do all the heavy lifting. I am not an artist, only an average painter, but can follow a set of instructions!

All highly recommended.