One of the things that interrupted the flow of my creativity recently was the announcement by Warlord Games of a new range of what they call Epic ECW/30YW figures.
Now if you've been around as long as I have "Epic" was a term coined by Games Workshop for their 6mm Space Marines gane. (And what a good system the original game was, but that's by-the-by). In this case Warlord have followed on from their (nearly but not quite 15mm) American Civil War and Napoleonic figures with a 1640s release.
The figures aren't bad - there are some issues - odd design decisions, and of course their scale (12mm to the figure's eye) but for the price they're not bad. Now I already have some 15mm ECW tucked away somewhere, but these looked interesting. Then one of the guys at our club says "oh yes, I have some armies!" and it all began to snowball a bit.
So first the Warlord models.
There are two basic sprues/frames/things what ever you call them:-
The Infantry sprue

The Cavalry - Harquebusiers/Cuirassiers/Mtd and Foot Dragoons, some commanded shot, a commander and light and a heavy gun.

The Foot sprue is petty much self-contained - enough Pike and Shot to make a nicely sized regiment - though to be honest - you could also call it a brigade. As the war went on and regiments got worn down, you would probably find a group of different coat colours from remnant units in a body this size.
The cavalry sprue probably tries a bit too hard but if you group the contents of two or three sprues together then you can create a decent number of units,
These two pictures show the contents of the two basic boxes - one Foot and one Horse. Each box has three sprues in but you'd need to look on the Warlord web-site for prices.


So what have I been up to?
Well, apart from startling a young man in a newsagents shop by snatching 4 copies of Wargames Illustrated out of his hands as he was putting them out on the shelves for sale to get hold of the give- a-way sprues to get hold of two infantry and two cavalry sprues, I has been building scenery.
The time was when we used to play a lot of 15mm games at our club but that was when Napoleon was a lad, and we don't have a lot of scenery anymore, so that was one of the first tasks.
I bought a pack of cheap N-Gauge trees off E-Bay. 40 trees for about the price of one and a half of the models on offer in some of the model shops round here. They're only about 50mm tall, but they will do the job. The figures are some of the Warlord Plastics[i] and some metal figures by Steel Fist Miniatures[/i], which fit in with the Warlord quite nicely and provide some variation.


I've got some more on order to provide some height difference.

I've mounted them on 40mm bases in 1's, 2's, and 3's. I will make some woodland bases and the tree bases will slot into spaces on them. Like these, that I made for our 28mm and 1/72nd scale games.


Hedges weren't that common in the ECW, most fields weren't 'enclosed', and there was quite a fuss when some landowners started doing just that, but there were some. So, to make mine I used giant lolly pop sticks - 150mm long x 20mm(ish) wide. I glued some old flocked sheet onto them, trimmed them up and made the hedges out of Woodland Scenics Clump Foliage. Cheap, quick and quite effective.

The road is just a strip of vinyl flooring and still needs some painting.

Last of all, some cottages, just for visual interest as much as anything. Constructed out of 2mm MDF, I was going to model on the half-timbering, but when I got to that part of the job - in 15mm with my old eyes? Nah! I'll just paint the detail on. The tradition English "black & white" cottage is a Victorian invention, so earth tones and green-grey wood.

Hope this has been of interest. The Towers of Ilium project is just on hold and I will be getting back to that as soon as I can but this is a bit of a priority at the moment.
Thanks for looking in.