Easy conversion. Two from the Miniarts French Knights with assault ladders. Normally they are attached to the ladder but after removing the "ladder Clips" and attaching one foot to a base, two carging Knights.
Another easy one. The Archer´s body from Aifix´s Sherriff of Nottingham set and a head from the Zvezda´s French Infantry of the Hundred Years War. The standard bearer (from Redbox´s Town and county Levy ) lost his Halberd and gained a flag.
More complicated. A couple of bods from Zvezda´s English Infantry of the 100 Years War, with a bit of arm twisting / swopping, the hands re-modelled and the seigepark gets a couple of new workers.
Body transplants. Always a bit dodgy. The top half has to look "natural" on it´s new legs. This isn´t difficult when creating a riding pose but the foot bods are a pain. Both tops halves are from Zvezda´s French Knights. The trumpeter´s legs are from Zvezda´s French Infantry of the Hundred Years War, the Knave´s from Italeri´s Medieval Tournament and Medieval Challenge.. (one thing..the hand of the trumpeter, the one holding the trumpet..try that at home!!!! )
These are some very good bod conversions! Very well executed Paul!
ReplyDeleteGreetings
Peter
http://peterscave.blogspot.com/
Good stuff. I'm about to embark on a series of plastic conversions. I've seen your blog on head transplants (great, really informative)any tips on how to change hands and equipment in the hand. Sort of giving bods spears that they did not have etc? Please, anything would be of help or even a good link on the web. Cheers. I'm a great admirer of your work.
ReplyDeleteThanks :-D
DeleteI´ll make a small "how to". I haven´t seen any on replacing or giving bods spears..not in 1/72nd scale. The bigger scales, say 28mm, are either the hard plastic sort, which you can glue or like the metal ones, drill a hole for a weapon.
Cheers
paul
Ta. I'll look forward to it.
DeleteVery good work Paul!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat looking conversions
ReplyDeleteAwesome conversions! (But I'll stick to keeping my figs in one piece until I learn more)
ReplyDeleteGood looking. Great ideas for my Zvezda HYW English.
ReplyDeleteTop class conversion and painting for your ever expanding and very unique figure collection.
ReplyDeleteLovely natural conversions Paul. Well carried out.
ReplyDeleteGreat conversions! What type of glue do you use when sticking soft plastic together?
ReplyDeleteThanks :-D
DeleteI don´t use glue, for a couple of reasons. Some types of plastics don´t glue to others and even if they hold for a while they don´t hold for ever. The Type of plastic Emhar has used actually bonds, but with most plastics, the glue just forms a bridge, and eventually the bridge looses it´s capacity to hold (it goes brittle). All my conversions are pinned together, either with normal dress pins (head and body swops) or with Piano wire (arms etc) The gaps I fill with woodglue, which stays elastic no matter how old it gets.
I´ve got conversions from 30 plus years ago. The glued ones have gone brittle but the pinned ones are still fine.
Cheers
paul
Great!
ReplyDeleteYou've got an 'eye' for seeing conversion possibilities, and then the 'what-for' to successfully pull it off. Slick work!
ReplyDeletevery cool paul and a how to would be great!
ReplyDeleteThe conversions are definitely creative and then looking at the brush work is another treat You've gotten so much detail onto these small pieces. Looking at work like this is the kind of thing that will push me to keep developing as a novice painter.
ReplyDeleteGreat conversions! It's really brilliant!
ReplyDeleteThey look very nice!
ReplyDeleteFantastic Paul. I love the trumpeter and the knave and yes I did try that! Not as easy as he is making it look! ;)
ReplyDeleteVery fine work Paul. One couldn't tell they were conversions unless you had said so. Although you are right, the hand on that trumpet chap looks weird, that's the only anomaly that stands out,
ReplyDeleteWell done,
Cheers,
Mike
If I didn't know about the kits, I would say that they are ready made from the manufacturers.
ReplyDeleteFantastic work Paul!
T.