Thursday, April 24, 2025

Once More Unto The Bases

 Yup. 


These veterans have been on various bases from individual washers to various multi-figure bases, often more than once. Having shaken the 60mm wide base habit, this arrangement of four 40mm infantry on a 2" sq. base worked well in the last game, gives a better impression  of a long thin line, and lets me deploy 1/2 of a battalion or even a single stand. 

Its going to be a busy weekend, 

8 comments:

  1. Visually speaking, I think you are on to something here..
    Alan Tradgardland

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. Cheaper and easier than buying and painting new ones. :)

      Delete
  3. Long thin lines are, visually speaking, key to the "look of the thing." Speaking of which, Ross, how in the past did you remove figures from bases? I have a lovely unit of Holger Eriksson cavalry (purchased eight or nine years ago) that I have never been able to remove from old bases. Even after soaking them in hot water. I think LocTite or some similar epoxy was used. It won't budge. Given the delicate nature of the figures, I haven't attempted to remove them more forcefully. Any suggestions?

    Kind Regards,

    Stokes

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good to hear from you.

      I agree on the lines, I used to do it by fielding Brigades of several 15and then scrape off the glue until I was able to POP! the up by working a knife blade inbetween glue and metal. mm battalions on a table with double the sq footage. The 40s are a bit bigger and my table smaller so I tried to scrunch them up to a proper shoulder to shoulder but had no room to increase the battalion width. Just didn't look right.

      Loosening epoxy without damaging figures is tricky (as experience has taught ). I presume the bases are a hard wood? I'd be leery of chemicals doing damage. In the past I have taken a sharp hobby knife or razor saw, I try to whittle the wood bases until I could work a sturdy knife or thin screwdriver under the figure's base and POP! the figures off.

      It's a tricky business though and too much enthusiasm can result in a damaged figure, hopefully fixable but....
      It's a bit like cavalry charging an entrenched battery...

      Delete
    2. If it is superglue then you could try popping a base in the freezer. Low temperatures make superglue brittle so you may be able to pop them of the base. This doesn't work with expoxy and I can't think of anything that you could do that won't ruin the figures if it is epoxy.

      Delete