Sunday, February 5, 2017

Entering Rehab in Canaan


No my friends, although it is arguable that I might suffer from lead addiction, and there is an addiction treatment facility not that far away in Canaan, CT, this post is about the beginning of the process of rehabbing the generic Cananite figures that Ken Baggaley gave me well over a year ago.

Some 27 figures in long robes but wearing no armor, and wielding 2 handed axes are the first to under go some TLC and basing upgrades. 

I washed the robes with diluted shades of light green, light yellow,  light blue-grey, dark red, dark brow, or dark greyas seemed appropriate to the original colors of the robes. This gave some nice depth to the subdued colors. 

A coat of "Magic Wash", and a little shading  of the flesh tones with some semi-opaque reddish brown helped to bring out the detail of the figures further. 

I terrained the bases in a similar fashion to my Egyptians, with tufts of various colors, then white glue covered with a mix of medium brown sand and fine model railroad talus. 

The base paint of the bases is more of an olive drab color than the sand colored tan that I used for the Egyptians, giving them a slightly different look. 

The standard/Icon bearer's staff was missing on the casting used for the second unit, and broke off during rehab on this one. I used the pin vise drill to drill out a hole in the icon, made a new pole out of heavy floral wire, glued them together with "Goop", and after that set fully, literally lashed them together with black sewing thread and more Goop, which you can apprecaite here. 

Rear view; I made the lavender "ribbons" on the staff out of tape type dental floss, tied on using "instrument ties", and then painted with acrylic paint. At this point, I think the standard looks better than the original did!

Here's "pre-rehab" view of some of the same figures for comparison. 

The second group has 12 castings in it, prettied up in the same general fashion as the first. 


The whole upper half of the standard was absent for this unit.

I cut of the remainder of the old pole, made a new one out of heavy floral wire again, and fashioned the tip using 2 small wood discs, more Goop, and some old Squadron green putty. 

It's a bit big (probably hollow to save metal) and crude, but perhaps not too far off what the workmanship might be out side of the Capitol, eh?

Once again, black thread was used to give more texture and support to the upper part of this new standard's staff. 

Dental floss "ribbons", painted light red this time, completes the replacement standard. 


    My wife is out of town tonight, so I might start rehab on some more of Ken's units tonight, with the Super Bowl for background entertainment!

12 comments:

  1. Excellent stuff, Peter! We all ought to try rehabilitation occasionally. I quite like the contrast between the before and after photos. Washes can make such an improvement by adding depth and enhancing definition. How many figures to refurbish?

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    1. 78+ more infantry and 10 2 horse chariots to go...

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  2. Lovely job on these figures Peter!

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    1. Thanks, Phil. I think the basing helps almost as much as the paint enhancements.

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  3. Great job getting these up to scratch! Just an axe and no armour or shield is brave!

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  4. That brings them up to date very nicely Peter. There seems to be a fair bit of subtle variety between the individual figures as well, which looks nice.

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    1. Thanks, Lawrence. I liked these figures the best of the "Canaanite" lot; more rehab jobs to come this month!

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  5. Man, what kind of standard is that? Looks like they pried the clock out of the tower on the local courthouse and put it on the end of a pole! Fanatics indeed.

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    1. LOL! It is a clunky, scratch built replacement by the painter who was too lazy to want to get any materials that he didn't already have on hand. I affectionately refer to it as "El Kabong!"
      Hey, the metalurigical skills were still fairly crude back then anyway! :-)

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  6. Nice bit of refurb work, the new basing helps enormously!
    Best Iain

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    1. Thanks, Iain! I agree, the basing lifts them up at least as much as the painting enhancement!

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