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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Wednesday, 12 December 2007
Coming soon...
French dragoons, several variants. This is a snapshot of the latest state of the figures; 5 variants, some with the tricorne, some with the fatigue cap... And as they are dragoons, some are shown on foot.
And by 'copy & paste' one would transfer the fatigue cap on other 'bodies': very useful for (fictitious) 'light' and militia types! The Dragoons 'bottines' also are of great potential (mis)use...
I think the copy and paste might be complicated by the way the cap overlaps the figure's body - but if there is enough interest I could always include the cap as a separate item on the templates so it can easily be selected and used in a a graphics program.
David, There is always the –old-fashioned but flexible- method inaugurated by The «Bishop of Uber Gruntshuffen». He printed one (enlarged) template, hand-colored or painted it and had the image numerized back to post it on his blog. So did more recently the ruler of (one of the) Freedonia(s).
Of course, before coloring it, you can modify the printed template to reflect exactly the cut of your imaginary uniform. In that case, ‘cut’ would be done with scissors and ‘paste’ with glue. Outdated but reliable!
Well, doing all those French infantry uniforms didn't stop them, did it? So I don't suppose the cavalry would. Are you going soft on the Stagonians, suggesting that they might actually possibly slightly vaguely be reasonable? ;-)
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...
Great!
ReplyDeleteAnd by 'copy & paste' one would transfer the fatigue cap on other 'bodies': very useful for (fictitious) 'light' and militia types!
The Dragoons 'bottines' also are of great potential (mis)use...
Thanks,
Jean-Louis
Hi Jean-Louis,
ReplyDeleteThanks; glad you like their potential! :-)
I think the copy and paste might be complicated by the way the cap overlaps the figure's body - but if there is enough interest I could always include the cap as a separate item on the templates so it can easily be selected and used in a a graphics program.
All the best,
David.
I suspect that had you turned out these designs earlier those vile Stagonians might not have attacked Tippelbruder.
ReplyDeleteThen again, they are so vile that they might have done so anyway, just because it is MEAN.
-- Jeff of Saxe-Bearstein
David,
ReplyDeleteThere is always the –old-fashioned but flexible- method inaugurated by
The «Bishop of Uber Gruntshuffen». He printed one (enlarged) template, hand-colored or painted it and had the image numerized back to post it on his blog.
So did more recently the ruler of (one of the) Freedonia(s).
Of course, before coloring it, you can modify the printed template to reflect exactly the cut of your imaginary uniform. In that case, ‘cut’ would be done with scissors and ‘paste’ with glue. Outdated but reliable!
Hi Jeff,
ReplyDeleteWell, doing all those French infantry uniforms didn't stop them, did it? So I don't suppose the cavalry would. Are you going soft on the Stagonians, suggesting that they might actually possibly slightly vaguely be reasonable? ;-)
David.
Hi Jean-Louis,
ReplyDeleteI must say that it does seem a little curious to me using digital data in the ways you mention - but perhaps I'm just too "new-fashioned"... ;-)
All the best,
David.