Being a uniform and flag design service to wargamers and to the imaginary crowned heads of 17th and 18th Century Europe, especially of the Seven Years War period - now By Appointment to the Court of Saxe-Bearstein! (But please note that the uniforms and flags presented here are not fictional - they are genuine 17th and 18th Century uniforms and flags that are as authentic as I can make them from my sources.)
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Friday, 6 July 2007
SYW Austrian Croat Template 3
And here is the last and simplest of the Croat template variants, worn by the Broder and Peterwardeiner Regiments.
I'm not sure that's quite how I'd put it, having to draw those cursed Heelanders. ;-)
Interestingly the sources I have seem divided on the uniform of the Hanoverian Horse Grenadiers. The contemporary manuscript shows a much plainer uniform than most modern works of interpretation depict. I rather suspect most modern works are showing the uniform of the amalgamated Guards unit post-SYW. Anyway, which do you prefer? I suspect the contemporary manuscript is the way to go - and it's less work for me! Win, win... :-)
Go for the simpler one . . . then you'll probably decide to do the other anyway . . . *grin* . . .
Seriously, I'm painting 25mm RSM figures (which are closer to 30mm anyway) . . . but I do not paint to exhaustive detail.
If it isn't visible from three feet, I don't bother painting it. While overly detailed figures may look good in close-up larger-than-life photos, they really only muddy the "clean look" of the Unit.
In other words, I paint fairly simply, so the simpler template will be closer to what I will see on the tabletop.
Well, I might - you know how crazy I am about "variants"! :-) Actually, just adding the basic grenadier mitre cap from the Hanoverian infantry template to the dragoon with the simple lapels would be very close to the pre-1763 horse grenadier. The shabraque isn't quite right but editing out the heraldic device and adding a Saxe-Bearstein emblem would do the trick. But as I mentioned earlier, I've been trying out a detailed Hanoverian mitre cap and you might like to wait for that... When I started with the templates, I was happy to leave out such particular detail but I'm getting fussier about authenticity in my old age. ;-) So even if you prefer simpler wargames figures, you might end up with very complex templates.
Saturday 6th June 2020 I've decided to allow comments from Anonymous Users but I'll still be moderating posts, as I'm sure the spam will probably flood in now! We'll see...
*sigh* . . . I suppose that you now think that you're free to do Scots in skirts.
ReplyDeleteAll of these Grenzers look good . . . but I am still hoping for my mounted Grenadier Guards before you tackle Highlanders.
-- Jeff
I'm not sure that's quite how I'd put it, having to draw those cursed Heelanders. ;-)
ReplyDeleteInterestingly the sources I have seem divided on the uniform of the Hanoverian Horse Grenadiers. The contemporary manuscript shows a much plainer uniform than most modern works of interpretation depict. I rather suspect most modern works are showing the uniform of the amalgamated Guards unit post-SYW. Anyway, which do you prefer? I suspect the contemporary manuscript is the way to go - and it's less work for me! Win, win... :-)
David.
Go for the simpler one . . . then you'll probably decide to do the other anyway . . . *grin* . . .
ReplyDeleteSeriously, I'm painting 25mm RSM figures (which are closer to 30mm anyway) . . . but I do not paint to exhaustive detail.
If it isn't visible from three feet, I don't bother painting it. While overly detailed figures may look good in close-up larger-than-life photos, they really only muddy the "clean look" of the Unit.
In other words, I paint fairly simply, so the simpler template will be closer to what I will see on the tabletop.
-- Jeff
Well, I might - you know how crazy I am about "variants"! :-) Actually, just adding the basic grenadier mitre cap from the Hanoverian infantry template to the dragoon with the simple lapels would be very close to the pre-1763 horse grenadier. The shabraque isn't quite right but editing out the heraldic device and adding a Saxe-Bearstein emblem would do the trick. But as I mentioned earlier, I've been trying out a detailed Hanoverian mitre cap and you might like to wait for that... When I started with the templates, I was happy to leave out such particular detail but I'm getting fussier about authenticity in my old age. ;-) So even if you prefer simpler wargames figures, you might end up with very complex templates.
ReplyDeleteDavid.