Bessiere wrote: The Italeri are much too small and those men were picked for size,most being around 6' tall which was huge for that era. The Redox grenadiers are too skinny as well. Guess I'll have to resort to metals for those like I did with the French Carabiniers (early) and Marins de la Gard.
I know nothing of the wars of Marlborough but if it has your interest it must be exciting so I'm going to go find some videos. Good luck on your Russians, I think you'll find as I did that many of these figures are a joy to paint. Being mostly Russian sculptors I think they really outdid themselves even on the Redbox Cossack sets.
Thanks again.
Cheers,
Bessiere
Although I have not made a start on my Napoleonic Russians, I have given a bit of thought to the 'problem' of how best to depict the Pavloski Grenadiers...and after all, is there any Napoleonic Russian army that does not feature this famous regiment?! I did have several boxes of the Italeri Grenadiers in mitre caps, but somehow they have gone AWOL in the stash and cannot be found...and I also take your point about them looking a bit small next to the statuesque Zvezda sculpts.
Just a thought....I haven't tried this yet.... but I am wondering whether a 'hat swap', taking the kiwer shako off some Zvezda grenadiers and fixing on a mitre cap from the HaT SYW Prussians, might work? It would depend on the relative size of the heads of these figures, but the SYW Prussians are on the 'large' size and it might just work. One box of the HaT Prussians in Marching or Action provides 40 mitre caps, enough for a good contingent of Pavlovs.
As for the wars of Marlborough: Well, perhaps not quite as exciting as Napoleonics, but with quite a lot of the same sort of variety of troop types, generals, uniforms, and a Europe-wide conflict...especially if you factor in the neighbouring Great Northern War as well. But for me, this period became a 'must have' period once Strelets released their WoSS sets.
