Thursday 12 August 2021

Still more Women of WW2

 These are some more minis from the Bad Squiddo Women of WW2 range.


As you can see, they are members of the Women's Land Army, and are going about various farming-related duties. 

They are fun figures to paint, and I've taken a few liberties with the colours I've chosen to paint them. I particular, the one on the left with the pig has a blue hat. Presumably she has lost her official one or maybe just likes the blue one better? I know that I've got the overcoat colours wrong too. It seems to have been a mid-brown shade, but I rather like the green better. The woman with the string of dead rats has a brown coat anyway. At least the jerseys and trousers are the right colours!

Not sure where these will fit in, gaming-wise, but they were a nice project to work on. I think that they'll have a role in my "Went The Day Well?" scenario, if it ever happens.

Monday 9 August 2021

WW2 women War Correspondents

 These are three female war correspondents from the Bad Squiddo Women of WW2 range.


And here they are from behind, to show off more of the excellent details on these sculpts. Look at that Rolleiflex TLR on Lee Miller.

I actually painted these a couple of months ago, but forgot to post them here. 

I will let Annie Norman tell you who they are in her own words;

Ruth Cowen (left)

Her new boss’ first words of greeting were, “Get that woman out of here!”. Despite being the first accredited female war reporter (along with Inez Robb), Ruth had been a reporter for 19 years before she began covering warzones. She paved the way for over 100 who would follow her during the course of WW2, fighting her own side skirmishing against sexism. Cowen worked in North Africa then onto England and France, and enjoyed boasting about her she kept her blonde hair topped up by mixing the dye in her helmet!

Lee Miller (centre)

Probably the most famous female war reporter, Miller had an established career as a model and then photographer for Vogue. She switched as soon as the Blitz began, as she was in London at the time. From London, she travelled further onward to France and Germany covering many distressing events with her evocative photography. In this model I have shown her lowering her helmet while witnessing the aftermath of the Dresden bombing.

Toni Frissell (right)

Another photographer for Vogue and the stars, Frissell began volunteering for the American Red Cross, stating in 1941 "I became so frustrated with fashions that I wanted to prove to myself that I could do a real reporting job.", later she became the official photographer for the Women's Army Corps (WAC). As well as documenting the European front, her work covered the women and African-American men of the US army, who had been previously overlooked. 

I will add that Lee Miller, who was an amazing woman, had lived in Paris before the war, between 1929 and 1932, becoming a photographer and model working with Man Ray, who was also her lover and mixing with many of the avant garde of pre-war Paris, including Picasso, Jean Cocteau and Paul Eluard. In 1937, Miller returned to Paris where she met the Surrealist painter Roland Penrose, who became her lover, although she was married to someone else at the time. 

After the war, she lived with Penrose in the UK and became pregnant with their son, Antony. After divorcing her Egyptian husband, she and Penrose married. They lived in East Sussex until her death in 1977.

Of course, you can use these figures as any war correspondent you like and they could be useful in other settings than WW2.


Sunday 1 August 2021

Five more gunslingers.

 Here are the next five figures for my Wild West project. Again, these are all Artizan Wild West minis.


I really like this guy on the left. He's got the look of a saloon bar piano player about him, but possibly one with a bit of a hot temper, always ready to settle an argument with a pair of six shooters. He's definitely got a bit of an attitude in this pose. A really nice sculpt.





This figure is my only female gunslinger, at least so far. She isn't going to take any nonsense from anyone. A tough and uncompromising woman in a tough male world.

Next, here are three useful generic gunfighters who will find work in whatever posse or gang needs new recruits. They could also represent a rancher and two of his ranch hands, protecting the herd from rustlers.

These are the end of my Artizan figures, but I have two gangs of minis by Great Escape Games in my Dead Man's Hand starter box set, one of lawmen and the other of outlaws. I will get them done at some point, but now I fancy a break from the Old West.