Friday, January 13, 2017

Halflings, Part I (LeafGrave project)

As I mentionned in a previous post, I'm starting the work on a LeafGrave/Fantasy skirmish project ; the first Warband is a band of Halflings. I have around 40 of the little buggers from a StoneHaven Kickstarter, and I'd like to paint at least 20 of them for the Painting Challenge. The plan is to paint 5 of them per week, give or take a few weeks.

And it starts this week. As I mentioned, what I really love about the range is that each figures represents a RPG "class" or "profession", and every one of them is unique and full or personality. For this first batch of 5, we have the fighter, the chief, the cleric, the archer and the Rogue.

From left to right: fighter, cleric, chief, archer and rogue


The figures are lovely and super detailed, and have that Halfling caricatural look that I like. While painting them I realized one doesn't save that much time  when "batch painting" 5 completely different figures with different colour schemes! I wouldn't paint 10 at a time, that's for sure. 

I painted each one individually, but I did favour green and brown tones, which I find are traditional Halflings colours. I went with a super old school "goblin green" style of base to get a bit of that old 80s Citadel/AD&D vibe, but also because I didn't want to detract from the figures and wanted to keep a very woodland vibe to the whole bunch.

So 5 28mm (if a bit of the smaller side of the scale! ) figures equals 25pts to add to my challenge total!

6 comments:

  1. They look grand, Iannick. I particularly like the chief. He looks pretty bossy for a halfling.

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    1. Thanks Matthew! He's not called "The Chief" for nothing ;-)

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  2. Nice. I wonder how they scale? My binge buying of Halflings found different ranges all over the place.

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    1. I only have Westfalia Halflings for comparison. But that's why I got the whole range for my skirmish project: it eliminates any scale issues!

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  3. These are very sharp Iannick - great work.

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    1. Thanks Greg! There's a few more in the pipeline... ;-)

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