Showing posts with label Headswops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Headswops. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Fireteam Yvette - W.I.P.


"Est-ce que cela va être un combat debout ou d'une autre chasse au bug?"
"Un autre chasse au bug! 
 
I'm having fun. Can you tell? And another pack of Legion heads on order from Mr Pig. "Allons enfants de la Patrie, Le jour de gloire est arrivé !......."





Mark




Tuesday, 17 May 2011

First Froggie Off The Production Line...........


Not quite the Frogstar Troopers I'd planned for this week but sometimes you've got to just go with the creative flow..... mais "Non, je ne regrette rien" so here is "Mon Légionnaire".

Only 20 odd hard bitten 'Fighting Cockerels' to go!



Cheers
Mark

Thursday, 12 May 2011

15mm Shephard Conversion

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A male Shephard (a la Mass Effect) created from a Critical Mass Games Naga figure and a GZG separate head.

15mm Shepard conversion: notice the 'Omni-tool'

The Shephard in the game is a bit too pretty-boy, Gillette razor advert, so I gave mine the 'Arnie' head from the GZG XH1 Separate Heads pack for that "Get To Da Normandy!" stompin' alien scum look.

Cheers
Mark

Thursday, 13 January 2011

London Calling: 2024AD

Another example of Khurasan Federal Army goodness converted into Neo British. Inspired not a little, by the excellent Gone With The Blastwave e-Comic.


London calling to the faraway towns
Now war is declared - and battle come down
London calling to the underworld......

CHORUS

The ice age is coming, the sun's zooming in
Meltdown expected, the wheat is growing thin
Engines stop running, but I have no fear
Cause London is drowning and I, live by the river


"OK 417, cut the music......"

Cheers
Mark

Wednesday, 12 January 2011

Khurasan Federal (Neo British) Conversion

In the twisted wreckage of London 2024AD.........

 15mm Neo-British Conversion

Khurasan Federal Army body with head from OOP Elheim modern british helmet with gasmask sprue. 


Works for me! If I can get more heads from Matt - there'll be a whole army of these guys. If not, then a small squad of survivors bolstered by a few tattered remnants of other commands together with those droids with sufficient battery life remaining......

Cheers
Mark

Workbench Serendipity

This morning I'm working away on my Winter of '79 project. Cutting the heads with sidecaps off  Liberation Mins, GDR Workers Militia in order to turn some new Eureka 1970's British Internal Security troops into proxies for the Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders.

That left me with several headless armed civilian workers bodies. Not wishing to waste the minis - I first tried some of helmet and gas mask wearing heads removed from the Eureka British. Aiming in the vague direction of a 1979 militia, Zombie Apocalypse survivor, meets Twilight 2000 sort of thing.

Remembering that I had a sprue of Modern British helmets with gasmasks from Elheim, I match them with the GDR Workers Militia bodies to find they are much smaller than 20mm. A loose pack of Khurasan Federal Army is lying on my cutting mat, I pick up a mini to check the size of the Elheim head.......

Guess what? The British gasmasked heads match the Federals! knocked the heads off a couple of the Khurasan minis, stuck on the gasmasked helmets and hey presto have a fireteam that would give 28mm Pig Iron Kolony figures a run for their money! Also make great Near Future Neo-Brits.

Cheers
Mark
  

Sunday, 4 April 2010

15mm Headswop Tutorial

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Here's a quick tutorial to encourage those of you who may have fancied doing headswops in 15mm but put off by the thought of it being fiddly or needing tools/materials that are costly or not easily available.

That was me. I read a lot of tutorials espousing pinvice drills, pinning with brass rod etc and you come away wondering if a) you have the skills and b) whether the effort/cost is worth it.

In this tutorial I will show you that you don't need any special tools or materials beyond what's already in your model toolbox and will have a model you will be proud of in only 5 minutes.

I love GZG's new separate heads (SG15-XH1 & XH2) and thoroughly recommend them - you'll see a lot of conversions using them on Dropship Horizon over the next month. For the purpose of this exercise I will use separate heads from Peter Pig's Heads & Odds range.

In Sci Fi terms, my favourite heads from P.Pig are L-R below: No.45 French Beret FFL Modern, No.49 Tank Commander IDF and No.46 German WW2 Combat Cap.

Peter Pig 15mm Heads and Odds

A word of caution. Peter Pig heads are 'small' that is, they are designed to fit Peter Pig models which are closer to 15mm than most Sci Fi/Modern ranges on the market. However, they work surprisingly well with most but not all of the 15mm Sci Fi figures.

Having said that. Whilst you may not be able to get away with the Peter Pig heads on the same base with other miniatures that have bare heads/open helmets, but as individual minis or elsewhere within the battleforce - they'll be fine. I tend to use the Pig separate heads in circumstances where the rest of the force are wearing closed faced/full visored helmets such as GZG's New Israelis, FSE etc.

The GZG heads are larger as they are designed to fit the 'larger' GZG figs - but as a result they have far more character in their faces. Used judiciously they fit well on many other manufacturers miniatures including Peter Pig/Rebel Minis etc. See my previous 'Arnie' figure.

Before we begin, a note on hobby knives - if you follow this tutorial you will kill your expensive X-acto knife blades in short order. I bought a blister pack of 8 'snap' blade knives from Poundland - for a pound. Fantastic - they are used all the time.

STEP 1

  • - Inspect the miniature carefully to determine the best line of attack. Use a quick wash of GW Badaab Black or similar round the neckline to see the details clearly.
  • - Clean the chosen miniature and separate head (especially the head) of flash and any mould seams before going any further.
  • - If I want to keep the original miniature's head to use again, I cut round the neck with the point of my knife, then try to twist the head off. If this doesn't work I'll use firm but limited downward angled cuts. Carefully trying to avoid any detail I want to keep, though not always possible.
GZG 15mm FSE miniature
  • - Sometimes, you just have to get the snips out and cut the head off in chunks, using a knife to pare down the remaining metal.
  • - TAKE CARE at all times! Cut away from you and if using snips, point the head away from you/family/pets.
  • - Now clean up the neck and surrounding area, but don't expend a lot of effort at this stage.

STEP 2

  • - Once again take a good look at the miniature to determine where you will be attaching the neck spigot, the angle of the head etc.
  • - Cut the neck spigot of the separate head to 2-3mm in length and use Blu-tack to attach the head at various angles/attitudes so you know what works best for the mini and looks good to you.
  • - Now make a small pilot hole using the tip of your knife. This will help prevent the knife slipping. When ready 'Drill' downwards using a circular motion. Make sure you apply pressure downwards to avoid injury. NOTE: The miniature is on the cutting mat for demonstration purposes - you will need to hold it firmly, keeping fingers away from the blade.


  • - You will be surprised how quick and easy it is to create a perfect dip for the spigot. Keep the angle of the knife high otherwise you will have a wide but shallow pit, perhaps unintentionally destroying detail that you wanted to keep. This is what you are aiming for:


  • - Clean off any excess metal round the rim with the edge of the knife/file, leaving a clean edge (above).
STEP 3

  • - Try the fit of the head/spigot at the angle you're aiming for. Cut the spigot/make the hole deeper as required.
  • - To give yourself greater control when attaching the head, plus preventing yourself from gluing your fingers together - to the miniature - to the head - et al, stick the head to a coffee stirrer using Blu-tack (see below).


  • - Happy? Drop a blob of your preferred brand of superglue into the hole. I use a GEL superglue for greater application control.


  • - Attach the head and hold it steady. In my experience GEL superglue takes that little longer to set, maybe up to a minute. Don't rush this bit!

STEP 4

  • - Revel in your brilliantness! You have just created a unique miniature in 15mm!


  • - If you just want to 'make sure' the head stays on - a collar of epoxy resin or Miliput/Greenstuff will provide the extra resilience you are looking for and also repair any small details on the miniature. You'll be surprised what you can get away with once the figure is painted though, including globs of errant epoxy! So don't sweat it.
DONE!


Seriously, it only takes 5 minutes once you get the hang of it. That's a Sci Fi platoon in an hour.

But what if the head comes from another miniature and doesn't have a spigot? No probs - a quarter of the headswops I've done over the past 5 years or more have been heads taken from other figures. All I do is make a hole in the bottom of the head so that the glue has something to purchase. I also make extra effort to create a small dip on the miniature just under the jaw so that the head rests more firmly on the miniature.

I've not lost one head from one of my headswops over the years, so I know this works. Go on, have a go - it's easy and fun. I garuantee you'll be looking at every miniature now for potential beyond it's nominally intended role - and will even reconsider miniatures that you passed up or discarded in the past.

If you have tips or tricks of your own about headswops in 15mm - feel free to share in the Comments section below.

Cheers
Mark
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Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Get To Da Choppa!

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My WIP interpretation of 'Dutch', A relatively simple headswop with a GZG Separate Head (SG15-SH1) grafted onto a Peter Pig AK47 range Modern US Marine.

It's almost midnight so I'm calling it quits. I'm pleased with how he's turning out - tomorrow, I'll finish the eyes, do the face camo, boots and base details.

Cheers
Mark
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Monday, 8 February 2010

Monday Night Bodyswerve

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Came home from work enthused and ready to finish painting the Rebel Minis 15mm Spec Forces figures I was dabbling with yesterday. And then I got distracted.......

First up, a GZG headswop (pack SG15-XH2) on a Rebel Minis 15mm Spec Forces Operator with HK at Alert Carry.

I needed to change the head as it was miscast with the left goggle lens much higher than the right - it reminded me of that episode of Citizen Smith where Tucker's wife knitted balaclavas for our errant urban revolutionaries! So it had to go and hey presto! - we get 'Carmen' (Angie Jibaja), Peruvian SF assigned to the Ghosts (yeah right!).

Then whilst I had the glue out and bit of space to work on - I decided to put together Khurasan's Space Demon Colossus.

It is a beautiful model. Once again, the photo here does not do it justice. It is really scary in it's own right and will be the pride of your Hive Army! The tripod leg design is a masterpiece!

Click on pic for larger image

Some construction tips:


1. Make sure the legs are straightened before you attach them.

2. Attach the back leg first!

3. The two front legs will not fit firmly without some work. I cleaned out the sockets with an old craft knife but even then be prepared to clip the tabs on the legs slightly to allow a snug fit.

4. Put a small layer of Miliput/Green Stuff or Epoxy resin in the bottom of the socket to make for a really firm long-lasting grip.

5. The metal is like cheese to work with. Strong but carves/cuts easily. Careful when prepping the model.

In all, 5 minutes to prep, 5 minutes to sort the leg attachments, 5 minutes to glue/hold the legs in place. I thought the legs would take much longer, but even with the extra 'work' - no time at all!

Back to undercoating this beauty and painting more miniatures.......

Cheers
Mark
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