I’m currently half way through painting a bunch of second hand Zulu figures.
The previous owner had undercoated them black. That makes it difficult to see
the head ring that denominates the experienced warrior who got to marry. The
non head ring lads are younger and perhaps fiercer. The Zulu Nation was quite
strict about pre- marital congress. You got to marry after being successful in
battle. Call the young fellows incentivized.
Black undercoat is good. Sort your head rings from non- head
rings first.
Paint loin cloth, monkey tail kilt and whatever, rear of
shield and weapons and hair.
Use a mid- brown to pick out muscles, knee caps, elbows, including
brow and nose.
Highlight the above with a leather brown. Paint the head
ring grey.
When dry apply a wash of undiluted nut brown ink.
Let it dry overnight and varnish the next day.
Now turn to the front of the shield. Any unit with a head
ring will have more white in their cow hide shield. The most experienced units
might have white shields. The new boys (no head rings) have mainly dark
coloured shields albeit with the odd splash of white.
Getting the shields right is demanding because of the laces
that run in a line down the centre. It is easier to create a visual impact by
using a contrasting colour for the lace.
There we go, Zulus hopefully looking like Zulus. Mine are
intended for TMWWBK.
While we are on TMWWBK. It advises us to deploy a token when the unit's Leader becomes a casualty leaving it leaderless. The token indicates the unit is leaderless. Why not just add a non fighting leader figure and remove it when the leader becomes a casualty?
My Zulus are from Lancashire Games and Essex Miniatures. The former tend slender but both are OK together. BTW, Lancashire British do not size well with their Zulus at all.
Great work sir 👏
ReplyDeleteGood work on your Zulus, your skin tones have worked out really well.
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