Anyone who dislikes ‘personal trumpet blowing’ and /or shameless self-promotion may wish to skip this post.
Wargames Illustrated - WI354 April 2017 |
I was reading an article, in the latest copy of Wargames Illustrated, about The Pikeman’s Lament rules and noticed in the photographs the Covenanter musketeers and an artillery piece looking pretty familiar. On closer inspection, I realised that some were pieces I painted for Warlord several years ago. It’s nice to know that they are in John (owner of Warlord Games) Stallard’s personal collection and that they are still being played with.
Dodgy photographs of the same figures can be found here [Scots Covenanters].
I remember receiving a reply from Warlord implying that the uniforms weren't the correct shade of Hodden grey and the colour
for the Scots Saker cannon carriage was too bright and not authentic. This last part made
me chuckle because I got the information about it from someone who I later
discovered was an expert on civil war artillery and a founder of the English
Civil War Society. I don’t think I have a particularly distinctive painting
style so it probably the colour of the carriage that helped me to recognise them.
If you want to purchase a copy of the magazine for yourself, you can do so
from here [Wargames Illustrated] And no I’m not on commission, in case you were wondering.
I buy my copy from a local gaming store [Asgard GamesUK].
Speaking of which, I seem to be quite fortunate in that there is also a WHSmith store near to where I live where all three of the usual wargaming magazines are normally on sale. Although there is an obvious push towards electronic versions at least having a physical copy in front of you enables you to be able to flick through the mag to see if that issue is worth buying. I think publishers realise this as more and more of them seem to offer online glimpses into the online/PDF versions.
As an aside, another one thing I did notice was that via a combination of blogs, forums, newsletters, Facebook and podcasts I already know or recognised most of the content. Unfortunately, I believe, this doesn’t bode well for the hard (paper) copy versions of magazines given that online versions seem to offer more content. I still prefer to have the ‘real’ thing at hand to read but this may be a generational thing as I also rarely see anyone young (i.e. in their 20’s) reading a newspaper, for instance.