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54mm Waterloo Cornfield Base-A Blast From The Past

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  • Neil Merryweather
    SMF Supporters
    • Dec 2018
    • 5189
    • London

    #1

    54mm Waterloo Cornfield Base-A Blast From The Past

    I've had this figure on my shelf for around 40 years, just waiting for me to retouch his left eye, repair his bayonet and to decide how to finish the base. You can see the dust very clearly.
    Click image for larger version

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    He's a Phoenix Miniature from the seventies, probably sculpted by Clff Sanderson, I would guess by the style. The base is from an Airfix mounted figure. He was painted in Humbrol by a teenage me.
    I have just read Bernard Cornwell's factual account of the Battle of Waterloo and he mentions that the battlefield was a cornfield. Coincidentally, I was looking through my modelmaking Bible by Stan Catchpol and I noticed a tip on making corn, so I thought it would be the perfect setting for my Old Guard.

    We are going to have to allow some artistic licence here, because by the time the Old Guard advanced it was at the end of the day and all the corn would have been completely trodden down and mashed.There's probably a case to be made for representing the Young Guard's advance earlier in the day, but that would mean research into the uniform differences and repainting, and that's not the point of the exercise.
    Another reason for this project is as a practice run for my entry into Jim& Samson's figure GB later on, which will be on a Waterloo theme.
    I have already done the retouching (and cleaning...) and a bit of work on the base, but I don't have any pics yet. Will post tonight or tomorrow .
    Cheers
    Neil
  • Jim R
    SMF Supporters
    • Apr 2018
    • 15704
    • Jim
    • Shropshire

    #2
    Hi Neil
    50 years on a shelf - you're right, it's long enough :smiling2: Interested in seeing how you model a cornfield.
    Jim

    Comment

    • Neil Merryweather
      SMF Supporters
      • Dec 2018
      • 5189
      • London

      #3
      Only 40 years Jim!
      Don't age me any more than I am:flushed:

      Comment

      • Jim R
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 15704
        • Jim
        • Shropshire

        #4
        Sorry Neil. Mind you 40 years is still a fair old time for it to sit on the shelf. It looks like your teenage self painted rather well.
        Jim

        Comment

        • Steve Jones
          • Apr 2018
          • 6615

          #5
          I wasn't even born when your shelf was made let alone the model!LOL

          Comment

          • Guest

            #6
            Wow, an oldie but a goodie. I have a box of stuff I made as a teenager that was kept by my mum. Unfortunately it's all smashed to pieces as she would insist on dusting them. Looking forward to the cornfield.

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            • Neil Merryweather
              SMF Supporters
              • Dec 2018
              • 5189
              • London

              #7
              Originally posted by Peter Day
              Wow, an oldie but a goodie. I have a box of stuff I made as a teenager that was kept by my mum. Unfortunately it's all smashed to pieces as she would insist on dusting them. Looking forward to the cornfield.
              I feel a thread coming on- a sort of 'then and now'
              I have a couple more things I could share that have survived the various moves and purges of life

              Comment

              • Guest

                #8
                I'm interested to see what happens here Neil :smiling3:.

                Comment

                • Neil Merryweather
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Dec 2018
                  • 5189
                  • London

                  #9
                  Originally posted by SWR
                  I'm interested to see what happens here Neil :smiling3:.
                  Me too Ralph!

                  so I've retouched his left eye and washed him a bit- the pics show there's still some dust clinging on tenaciously.
                  Click image for larger version

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                  Thanks, Jim, for the complement ,by the way- I don't know if I'll ever get back to that standard.
                  Here is the potential cornfield. Probably the furrows aren't big enough- I have no idea what they should be like.
                  Click image for larger version

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                  I used Vallejo acrylic putty because its in a squeezy bottle which made it easier to make the furrows.
                  I have just taken him off the base as I realise it will get very tricky planting corn between his legs.
                  Here is the potential corn, as recommended by Saint Stan the prophet of Catchpol
                  Click image for larger version

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                  and here are the first stems
                  Click image for larger version

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                  The ears are made by dipping the tips in PVA and then dipping them in fine sand.

                  Only a couple of hundred more to go- this might take some time!
                  That's all for now, I've got a real hedge to trim today :sad:. Gardening is not something I enjoy but a grown-up has to do stuff sometimes!
                  thanks for looking
                  Neil

                  Comment

                  • Neil Merryweather
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Dec 2018
                    • 5189
                    • London

                    #10
                    Just a quick correction before anyone else points it out- at Waterloo the crop was RYE , not corn. And it was apparently 5-6 feet tall!
                    My paintbrush is only a scale 3-4 feet, so it will have to do.

                    Comment

                    • Guest

                      #11
                      The rye looks good Neil :smiling3:.
                      Make enough and you can harvest them and make some whisky:tears-of-joy:.

                      Comment

                      • Guest

                        #12
                        Looks great Neil. I wouldn't have the patience.

                        Comment

                        • Neil Merryweather
                          SMF Supporters
                          • Dec 2018
                          • 5189
                          • London

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Peter Day
                          Looks great Neil. I wouldn't have the patience.
                          We'll find out whether I have ,Peter.......
                          I've done 4 rows now, but I have now doubled the number of furrows:rolling: It's going to have to be a row every time I come to the bench,which takes about 5-10 minutes, rather than a prolonged session- that would be intolerable:flushed:.
                          I've never done individual track links, but I imagine it must about the same level of tedium.

                          Comment

                          • Jim R
                            SMF Supporters
                            • Apr 2018
                            • 15704
                            • Jim
                            • Shropshire

                            #14
                            Hi Neil
                            Pure dedication for sure. The rye does look good.
                            Jim

                            Comment

                            • Steve Jones
                              • Apr 2018
                              • 6615

                              #15
                              I get challenged over whether a rivet is in the right place or not. Your concerned about getting the crop right at Waterloo. Its a tough hobby this modelling lark :smiling5: :smiling3:

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