Sunday 23 September 2012

More 28mm Zombies

This week, I have mostly been painting zombies...

What I should have been doing is finishing, or at least progressing, some of my older hobby projects.  In particular, my Saga Scots warband is primed and ready to paint, but lack of completion is holding up even a trial game.  My 6mm Napoleonic armies are not quite ready for me to put on a game of Black Powder.  And for weeks now I've been intending to make some forest path scenery for a Robin Hood game...

Instead, I've been completing yet more zombies.  These are easy to paint because they're familiar (I'm always faced with a bit of inertia when starting a brand new project).  However, I don't really need them; I've already got enough zombies for anything other than the most ambitious game.  Sometimes you need to do things just because they're fun!

Blue Moon Zombies

I bought this set at Claymore 2012; getting round to painting them in less than 2 months is relatively quick for me!  Obviously I haven't finished all of the models in the set, but here are 3 female zombies.

The Blue Moon figures are somewhat "old school" in sculpting terms (for example, the inside of the hands is pretty much devoid of any detail).  I don't mind this at all though; firstly it's always good to have more variety and secondly these chunky models should stand up to rougher handling than some of my new plastic zombies (see below).  However, the moulds are clearly showing their age, with occasional large chunks of flash that needed to be carved or filed away.

Here are 3 male zombies; like the females they are all clutching or grasping at something.  For the most part, their clothing is very ragged and tattered and they have multiple wounds.  I don't think these are the freshest of zombies!

The guy in the boiler suit has even lost the top of his skull!

Wargames Factory Zombie Vixens

I showed some of my zombie vixens before, here.  Since then I've made some progress and can display quite a few more.  As well as the lifeguard and the maid (seen previously), this picture shows the evening dress and the nurse.

I think that the evening dress is my least favourite pose amongst these models.  It's the model that looks closest to Barbie in proportion; the legs are far too long in proportion to the torso.  The nurse is just fine though; I could also have painted her as a waitress, I think.

Here are some more of the vixens, including a couple of crawlers.  The first crawler is trying to pick up her handbag with the remaining stump of her arm and cannot figure out why it isn't working, poor dear!
There's not really much left of the second crawler at all!  I've modeled some extra guts and stuff spilling out of the torso, though I confess that I found doing this to be rather unsettling.

I think that the "little red dress" model could be used as a human if desired, rather than as a zombie.  It wouldn't be too difficult to find a head and some arms that didn't have injuries, or to fill in minor wounds with modelling putty.  She could be a survivor if given a weapon, or maybe just a terrified citizen.  She is barefoot, though - that might reduce the ways in which she could be re-purposed.
I've put a rat on the base of the right-hand crawler, just to add a bit of volume to a model that is otherwise fairly insubstantial.  This rodent comes from Black Cat Bases and was in a random accessories pack that I bought some time ago.
Finally, a tip: I tend to use Google Images a lot for inspiration when painting.  Don't search for "women's football strip" if you want to depict a team player; it won't return the results you expect.  Note also that using "uniform" instead of "strip" isn't much better!  The internet is a wonderful thing, but sometimes it can be a dark place as well...

9 comments:

  1. They all look fantastic mate. I much prefer metal over plastic its the weight as I pick them up I think with plastic figures especially ones I've had to put together I'm afraid of busting them.

    Nice work sir

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've sometimes put metal weights into the bases of plastic figures, mainly to stop them from drifting or losing their position during games. It does make them heavier to transport, though.

      Delete
  2. I love your paint jobs on these zombies. I agree that the Blue Moon zombies are amongst the least fresh-looking zeds on the market.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks. Yes, I was amazed at how many of the Blue Moon figures had no nose! Seems an odd wound or part decomposition to have in such numbers?

      Delete
  3. Well done mate. The vixen sets are pretty great.

    I have no blue moon zeds my self...Yet.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Again, thanks. I think the trick with the vixens will be to make the figures from the 2nd and 3rd frames/sprues look different from the first ones. After all, many of the poses are quite...distinctive.

      Delete
  4. I like your z's too and I'm a fan of the Blue Moon ones even if they're a fairly old sculpts now.
    I'm almost convinced toget a pack of the "vixens" too now- - damn you !

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The Blue Moon figures are some of the cheapest metal miniatures around, but still quite pricey when compared to the recent plastics. I guess it all comes down to what you want from your figures...

      Delete