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90mm Skinner's Horse Captain

Neil Merryweather

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Now that I’ve got the paints out for the D-Day GIs , I'm also going to break out of my comfort zone, both in scale and material.
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Skinners Horse Officer 90mm (7).jpg
This is my first ever 90mm figure,and not just for painting. This is a white metal casting of the first master figure I ever made for the late Michael Hearn of Hussar Military Miniatures back in(I think) 1989. This was the first of more than thirty masters I made for Hussar over the next 7 or 8 years, and they provided me with a legitimate excuse for military modelling in my spare time when I had a growing family..... I should say also that I really liked working for Michael, he was always very happy with my sculpts and he always paid me right away.
They were advertised regularly in Military Modelling at the time, and occasionally reviewed (always favourably, but then so was everything in those days. I found those reviews very frustrating because there was never any real critique). Hussar’s market was predominantly to collectors, ready-painted (by Michael’s wife Vera), and although they were available as kits I never ever saw one in a competition or anything . There were a lot of knights in armour with colourful heraldry in the range and I think they were in the Tower of London gift shop for a while , but they never really hit the hobby mainstream as I would have liked. But it wasn’t my business and I was glad of the cash - and the alibi!
I have copies of most of the figures I made ,but there are a few gaps. I keep my eye on Fleabay but they very rarely come up, and then usually they’re only ones I already have or those I didn’t make.
I’m quite excited about painting this guy because I have kept all of the castings in primer all these years, to keep the focus on the sculpting. At the time, and up until only a few years ago, I avoided painting anything, but now I have found a bit of confidence I'm going to have a bash. Also, I’ve recently been allowed to have a display cabinet in the house (rather than my hobby room),so I thought it would be good to inject a bit of colour- yellow, in this case.
My reference for this guy at the time was just what I was given (I can’t remember what, possibly an Osprey book), although I did go to the National Army Museum to check out the back view. Of course in those days there was no internet, no pinterest, and no digital cameras, never mind phones with a built-in camera, so my memory of the museum exhibit was reliant on what scrappy drawings I made. I’ve been back recently and taken a nice set of pics to refer to - and discovered some inaccuracies in the sculpt...
I’m not going to correct any of them or tweak the figure in any way (apart from removing mould lines, and I might just improve the spurs) as it’s a kind of historical document for me, of a point in time. He is moulded in white metal by the vulcanised rubber process, which puts the mould lines in some interesting places. Although the sculpt could be better, I’m happy with the feel of it, and it was certainly as good as much of the rest of the Hussar range; I never knew who any of the other sculptors were. Of course at the time the gold standard was Poste Militaire and Almond Sculptures, amongst others, and I was always striving for that. With this chap I wanted to capture the arrogance of the archetypical Indian Army types and I think I managed that. I really ought to have tried painting him at the time, though, because for instance this guy has no actual eyeballs, but I’m going to live with that. Since I’ve painted some of my own sculpts lately I have found that it shows up the inadequacies right away, and I could really have improved my sculpting much earlier on. Oh well.
What I will say at the outset, however, is that I never saw any other Skinners Horse figures at the time, and yet in searching for reference on the internet I have found several that are similar in pose, although I don’t know what scale they are. So I guess we all bought into the cliché...
And yet, sadly, I’ve not found a single picture of my own figure. Ho Hum.
So here goes with a nice change from olive drab, and, thanks to a friend on the Planet Figure forum, an experiment in undercoating yellow with pink!

Skinners Horse 1.jpg
 
Wow Hussar miniatures.Thats a name i remember Neil.I first started getting Military modelling in 1985 when i first saw it in W h smiths in Harlow.When i was 17 i worked for a Toy soldier company and helped clean up castings and made dioramas to compliment their figures.Im sure you can remember lots of companies back then,Chota Sahib,Cheshire Volunteer,Sovereign miniatures,New hope design,Mil art. Really interesting reading your story.Be watching with chair pulled up.
Richard
 
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Well I've finally got some paint on him.
I now know what a joy it is to paint a well-sculpted face, and OMG, what a crap job the ‘sculptor’ did of this one!
My apologies to anyone who ever tried to paint him.

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Unfortunately my abilities are no better in the painting department, and my patience is even more limited, so this is as good as it’s going to get.

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The doubling in size from the 1-32 scale that I’m used to is another challenge; I can’t get away with my usual sloppiness. Maybe my next 90mm face will be better? I’ve done the ‘tash blonde so that he looks more like a tanned Englishman than an Indian. As I’ve said before, I paint more by instinct than technique, so it’s pure luck if it works out.
I’ve under-painted the turban and sash in a dark blue before I work on the black(that will be fun) and I’m going to work from the top down, to minimise the danger of rubbing the paint off.It’s also the first time I've painted a white metal figure this big, and the weight is quite challenging too!
Anyway, that’s where we are after the first session, so let’s see how I get on with the straight gold lines on the turban...
Cheers
Neil
 
Dont be so hard on yourself Neil.Nothing wrong with your progress.Then again we are our worse critics at times,God knows what id be like if i ever do a figure again.Been so many years since i painted.Im hoping by doing some jets it will get my love of modeling again.
 
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I’ve now painted the turban, and I'm feeling a bit better about our boy’s prospects now.
I’ve wimped out a bit on the embroidery, compared to the real thing, but who’s to know....;):rolleyes:?

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But the red cone thing went better than I expected, given that the ‘sculptor’ had not provided any clue as to the decoration, and he got the proportions totally wrong.
Skinners Horse 5.jpg

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And I have to say the ‘sculptor’ really misunderstood the construction of the turban,

Skinners Horse 2.jpg
but I won’t hold that against him as he was a novice and the detailed information available was rather sketchy in the olden days....
As you will see I have underpainted the Kurta in pink- I’m curious to see how this works out.
Thanks again everyone for all the encouragement
 
Looking spot on mate.Coming along nicely.If modelling be the food of love do paint on.
 
Excelllent stuff neil , an actual casting of your original sculpt ! Painting is great , ive used the pink undercoat for yellow before and it works really well , sometimes if you use a white primer the yellow can look a bit greenish .
Am I right in thinking this is the same regiment as the Airfix Bengal lancer ? I really enjoyed doing that one , very colourful although his turban was a bugger to paint Cheers tony
 
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I’ve been beavering away with this guy in between all the household jobs that keep getting thrown at me, as well as helping my eldest daughter with a ‘Life Laundry’- clearing her lock-up of stuff she’s stored but hasn’t thought about for four years.
So, first the yellow.
It took four coats to cover the pink, so whether that would have been worse without it I don’t know, but I'm happy with the result, I just hope I can replicate it on the skirt of the Kurta. I DID take notes, though.
Then I painted the red, as the backing to the frogging, then the black, then I remembered to take a pic.
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I used a different light for these pics and hopefully you can see that his moustache is not bright yellow.
Next came an underpaint of buff for the gold braid.
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Then came the gold, and I had intended to create the loops by painting the insides in black over the gold, but I finished it all and then realised I had got it wrong so I didn’t take a picture. I overpainted the frogging part ready to start again.
So this is where I am currently.
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I knew at the time of sculpting that I hadn’t really understood how the frogging was done,and now it’s biting me on the bum!
This is how it’s supposed to be
Skinners Horse 1.jpg
I’m not really happy with the small loops on the collar, cuffs and front either, but I'm not sure I can improve on what I've already done, so I’m leaving that for the moment.
Thanks for watching
Neil
 
Thread owner
I have finished the braid and everything above the waist, except for the pugaree.
I think I’ve got the shade of gold braid too yellow-in fact in some pictures it looks almost silver- but I’m living with it. It would have meant a mix which I couldn't be sure of replicating at each session (in spite of my wet palette), so I wimped out.
I DID revisit the little loops on the front and cuffs, and I really had to resist the temptation to re-model stuff like the mail epaulettes and the decoration on the pouch belt, and especially the pickers and chains. And I sculpted the pouch itself completely wrong too.
I feel really guilty for never trying to paint these figures back in the day- I would have upped my game SO much if I had known then how much easier it is to paint when the detail is properly sculpted.
Anyway here is the current state of affairs
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Just noticed I've missed a little trefoil on the black point of the cuffs, but I can put that right without any drama.
At least I’ve managed to match the bottom of the Kurta to the top to my satisfaction, and the next step is the pugaree and sash .
After that it’s just the sword belt and slings, the breeches, boots and sword.
And the base
Ooh and the gauntlets.
Almost there
Cheers
Neil
 
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