Back in the early 90s to me were halcyon times when I had long hair atop my head and many pots of fresh Citadel paints at the ready - all things minis were awesome, the dice were six sided devils with whom I liked to share a few beers as we played a few haphazard table top battles with our friends while the metal music played... My back-log of unpainted minis was growing but manageable, and there seemed no reason to slow the accumulation of wargames I was getting into. My Games Workshop fan boy fever dreams of many fully painted armies seemed both reasonable and inevitable, glorious.
Well, with the discovery that reality was a poor friend to unchecked hobby ambitions, it came to pass that my back-log of unpainted minis grew faster than I laid paint from brush to models. Then after a short few years of my enraptured submersion below war gaming waters, the stuff of life banished all of my miniaturing hobbies into a few crammed boxes that were hauled through a couple moves and left to languish in the darkest closet corners for over two decades.
In those boxes of unpainted model shame and unspent paints, were unfinished soldiers for my mostly completed "Undead Army", a mix of official Games Workshop undead and proxy miniatures that seemed fit for purpose at a lower price point for purchase, for playing games of Warhammer Fantasy Battle that made sense at the time.
Back in the day when I was painting my Warhammer Fantasy Army of "Undead", I was naturally inspired by what I saw in White Dwarf Magazine and 'Evy Metal painting.. which to me meant all bases were treated with sand and white glue and painted with a foundation of Green Snot, dry brushed with Green Putrescence then given a wash with whatever the painting gawds saw fit to have mixed upon my pallet that day
I had the old models, I had the old paint, I had a new challenge...
So for these new reborn undead, once lost to long years to the purgatory unpainted grey, they arise painted at last, their moldering feet atop the same sandy green bases as their fellow undead in an army last painted many years ago... better late than never I suppose..
... and as these undead clamber and shuffle their return to the High Adventure of fantasy themed table top battles, so do I also return in earnest to the hobbies of mini painting and rolling war dice with the first points scored next to my handle-name.
28mm Undead figures x 11 + Challenge = Total 100 points
Skeleton Calvary (Mounted) 2x10pts = 20pts
Undead Dragon (Score as
1st Green Studio Pass: 'High Adventure' = 20pts
No comments:
Post a Comment