Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Why you should watch... Uglubs Armoury
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Dark Elf Warmaster part I: The Spears
I am not an experienced or talented painter in any way, the below is for my own reference as much as it is anything else. If you have any tips or suggestions, please leave a comment, they are most welcome.
The aim of my 10mm Warmaster Dark Elf project is to get an army ready for the table top with as little time spent painting as possible, whilst still having a good looking force. With that in mind I wanted a small colour palette of bright colours, using fast techniques. As I mentioned in my previous post, I bought these miniatures from ebay, as I don't want to do my own 3D printed. The STLs are from Forest Dragon.
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command strip with two troop strips ready to undercoat |
I have never worked with 3D printed resin before, but from research I knew I needed to wash the miniatures in warm soapy water. For undercoating I glued the miniatures to a large lolly stick and sprayed with a metallic undercoat, as the main colour will be the dull metallic look of the Dark Elf armour. (Note: my budget would not allow a 20p piece for scale).
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spray undercoat on, start of blocking out in white |
From there, the parts of the miniature that are not armour I painted with white.
Then, the block colours. Again I've kept things quite simple, but tried to make the lines crisp and neat (sometimes I succeeded).
After the block colours, I apply a wash using 'marine juice', a wash created by Sonic Sledgehammer and made by mixing three parts Dark Tone from Army Painter, three parts Reikland Fleshshade from Citadel, and four parts Lahmian Medium, also from Citadel. This was the first time I've used it, I thought it was quite effective.
A quick highlight of purple, red, silver, grey and bronze and the paint job was done.
I just need to glue to a base, and add texture and colour to the base and I'm done. I will do this when at least half of army is done, all in one batch.
The total amount of miniatures in this batch has been 60 minis, made up of 12 strips of 5, which makes 2 units in Warmaster (2 strips per base, 3 bases per unit).
I'm quite happy with these, especially the brighter purple, and will now continue onto the crossbows, with an identical scheme and method.
The project as a whole will be the following (this list includes the 2 units already painted)
- 6 units of spears - 180 miniatures
- 4 units of crossbow - 96
- 2 units of black guard - 60 miniatures
- 3 units of witch elves - 90 miniatures
- 1 unit of harpies - 18
- 2 units of dark riders - 24 miniatures
- 3 units of cold one knights - 36 miniatures
- 1 unit of bolt throwers
- 2 war hydra
- 1 general on manticore
- 1 hero on chariot
- 1 hero on cold one
- 1 hero - foot
- 1 sorceress on cauldron of blood
- 1 sorceress on manticore
- 1 sorceress on dark steed
- 1 sorceress - foot
Friday, June 20, 2025
Why you should watch... Jordan Sorcery
Why you should watch... Jordan Sorcery.
The You-Tubes is full of people waffling on about what people now call Warhammer Lore. Don't watch those people, they are all wrong and know nothing. Apart from Jordan Sorcery.
Jordan does not just read from one of the fan written wikis about Warhammer, he does actual research, he does brilliant interviews, he reads material that was actually published by Games Workshop. And of these three, it's Jordan's research that shines through and separates him from the rest of the chaff on wargaming You-Tubes.
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Jordan (L) and Martha (R) |
His series on the history of Warhammer is, quite frankly, a tour-de-force; history of the real-world development of the fantasy world that our toy soldiers inhabit; the artists, writers and business people that worked over decades to create Warhammer. The story takes many twists and turns and is fascinating, but I think that it's Jordan himself that makes it so fascinating. He brings the subject to life, like any good historian, as he explains and entertains.
Jordan has dozens and dozens of interviews with people that have been involved in the wargaming, rpg and general gaming industry and they are all of a high standard. There will be someone you really want to listen too and a few interesting people you have never heard of.
Here are my top 5 Jordan Sorcery Interviews:
- Rick Priestley - Warhammer Unmade
- Alessio Cavatorie
- Ian Watson
- Kim Newman (AKA Jack Yeovil)
- John Blanche
But it's not JUST interviews. It's not JUST Warhammer either. Jordan has gone into the history of Bolt Action, starting with the two founders of Bolt Action Miniatures, before they were bought out by Warlord games. RPGs are obviously of interest to Jordan, in fact he has written a part for the upcoming Warhammer The Old World RPG from Cubicle 7.
The single best thing about this channel is Jordan himself however - he is enthusiastic, knowledgeable and a great writer, presenter and interviewer. When he talks it's always interesting and when he's interviewing he lets his guests do the talking, just pipping int to nudge them in the right direction.
Jordan, of course, is not alone on his channel. He is often kept company by his cat, Martha.

Tuesday, June 10, 2025
The end of one project, the start of another.
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Xyston miniatures Pantadopoi Phalangites |
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Shield transfers by Little Big Men Studios |
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Close up. The bases turned out better than I thought they would. |
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More of the army |
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Dark Elf 10mm stl files by Forest Dragon. |