Having received my 1812 The Retreat from Moscow rule book I got straight to work on gathering the necessary terrain - which is helpfully listed in the rule book.
Luckily I had my snowy mat already (aka white table cloth)
I had also purchased earlier this year 80 n-scale pine trees for no real reason other than they were cheap. Some of these needed to be sprayed with a little white paint and based in snow.
Also in the terrain mountain were some n-scale tree armatures which with spray and basing would be snowy deciduous trees.
Some fences that I had bought last year from Pendraken that had been unsuitable for the purpose in mind would also be handy.
I needed to buy 6 buildings so went for my favourite cheap ones. The same as that had recently been featured on the blog as Chinese farm houses. While there were some card ones available, these would nearly be the same price with postage from overseas.
I also needed snowy rivers and roads/tracks. I already had these in paper terrain so printing them out and adding to magnetic paper, a bit of white paint and snow flock and I am done.
To cross the rivers I will need three bridges. These were built up out of toothpicks.
Then come the various markers that need to be made up. These I have made from small coloured discs and simply labeled.
Some piccies!
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| A bit of a closer view. Not quite perfect to the design but it is all there. REP markers are where the Russians arrive from and blue exit markers for the French to reach. |
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| Roads are a bit iffy where they are overlaid but being magnetic they should not slide about too much. The fences don't quite match the scenario layout but are close enough for me. |
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| Loot markers added, not necessary in the last scenario. I have made a simple Regimental Eagle to add for the last scenario. |
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| Closeup of my trees. I am quite pleased with these, although the the pine trees are a bit bright. |
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| One of my bridges. As I was adding the snow piles I realised I could add one, two, or three piles each so they can be easily identified if ever necessary. |
So now I am nearly ready. I am currently painting the British Napoleonic artillery and once done the 1812 troops are next. So fingers crossed a game before winter is over (down here)








That looks particularly frosty Ben. Makes me feel even colder on a cold winter's night.
ReplyDeleteIt looks bloody marvellous too!
Best wishes, James
Thank you James! It is getting a bit cold now.
DeleteGreat job! Ray and Lee will be pleased to see the ideas in their project and book picked up by others.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jonathan. I certainly used a lot of their ideas and the photos in the rule book for inspiration.
DeleteNicely done. Scaling down to 50cm x 50cm gives a great visual, looking forward to seeing Ray & Lee’s game in action.
ReplyDeleteThanks Norm. I thought it may have been to small but it turned out fine.
DeleteSuper job on this, like Norm says scaling it down really looks the part, I like this idea a whole lot.
ReplyDeleteThanks Donnie. It is a great idea for a game.
DeleteExcellent! Well done Ben, I'm chuffed that your so eager to give the game a go.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ray. I am certainly excited to get a game in as soon as the figures are all painted. It looks like it will be lots of fun.
DeleteIt is a great project as it is relatively small but still with lots of scope/options. Being prescribed by the rule book it wont expand endlessly as most of my projects do. 🤣
It also has got me to make some snowy terrain pieces that hopefully will get used elsewhere.
The next difficult bit will be thinking up names for all my French soldiers 😂
I shall look forward watching your progress on this fab project.
DeleteIt is all coming together very nicely. Look forward to seeing how the game plays out.
ReplyDeleteThanks Peter.....maybe a little while 😁
DeleteLooking good, Ben.
ReplyDeleteThank you Richard.
DeleteBeautiful trees. Looks like it will work well.
ReplyDeleteThanks Simon. I am hoping it all comes together.
ReplyDelete