Hundred Years War Perry Goodness (Rescued from WaybackMachine)
Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2022 9:33 am
I've been trawling through my old website again on the hunt for pictures that could be potentially be rescued from WaybackMachine. It is quite a frustrating process as more often then not the images most desirable for rescue will not link and I find myself just left with the thumbnails which are far too small to republish.
The army has since been rebased a few times for different rules systems before I settled upon a generic style of basing that covers most rule systems- or can be made to do so!
As I was saying, I made a real effort to set up each of the bases, which in WAB are supposed to be single miniatures based on a 20mm for Close Order or 25mm for Skirmishers/Light Infantry. This basing convention was excessively restrictive and not at all conducive to the vignette style basing I was aiming to produce. I wanted the miniatures to look as though they were in a fight; the high quality dynamic sculpts simply demanded it!
There are more pictures and a more indepth look at the heraldry (plus some of the army in action at Warhammer World and Alex Buchel's [of Saga fame] Hundred Years War Campaign Weekend) on my Just Add Water Blog blog here:
http://justaddwater-bedford.blogspot.co ... dness.html
Henry V and his Heraldic Banner Bearer, Sir John Codrington along with the John de Vere, Earl of Oxford.
Oxford:
Sir Thomas Erpingham and Archers
Experimental Basing on an Archer Unit:
More Experimental Basing on an Archer Unit:
The army has since been rebased a few times for different rules systems before I settled upon a generic style of basing that covers most rule systems- or can be made to do so!
As I was saying, I made a real effort to set up each of the bases, which in WAB are supposed to be single miniatures based on a 20mm for Close Order or 25mm for Skirmishers/Light Infantry. This basing convention was excessively restrictive and not at all conducive to the vignette style basing I was aiming to produce. I wanted the miniatures to look as though they were in a fight; the high quality dynamic sculpts simply demanded it!
There are more pictures and a more indepth look at the heraldry (plus some of the army in action at Warhammer World and Alex Buchel's [of Saga fame] Hundred Years War Campaign Weekend) on my Just Add Water Blog blog here:
http://justaddwater-bedford.blogspot.co ... dness.html
Henry V and his Heraldic Banner Bearer, Sir John Codrington along with the John de Vere, Earl of Oxford.
Oxford:
Sir Thomas Erpingham and Archers
Experimental Basing on an Archer Unit:
More Experimental Basing on an Archer Unit: