While I ended up doing four regiments of cavalry for the British I calculated that two of nine figures each should be enough for my Continental army, so I settled on the 2nd and 3rd light dragoons:
The 2nd light dragoons or Sheldon's horse, named after their colonel Elisha Sheldon, were an accomplished regiment, detachments of which also formed part of Washington's bodyguard:As with the 3rd dragoons, these Perry figures are one-piece castings with the horse and rider being single sculpts, although they all come with a choice of several arms which allows for quite a variation in pose and armaments:
It surprised me a little to find that the trumpeters were in reversed colours and I wondered how long that remained the case in practice, but it does make for a nice variation in uniform:
The flag is from GMB and sets off the command stand nicely:
An option for one of the figures is an arm brandishing a pistol which I think is my favourite pose:
The 3rd dragoons or Baylor's horse are almost the opposite in terms of uniform to the 2nd, so complement them nicely:
The trumpeter is again in reversed colours. If research ever discloses that this was not actually the case in practice, I suppose I can simply swap them between regiments...
Another GMB flag for the command stand:
That is the Continental cavalry now completed:
This just leaves ten Continental staff figures, which are currently on the painting table, and a dozen or so civilians to go before my AWI project is completed.
I have however managed to get slightly distracted along the way with some terrain pieces. I hope to have the second of these completed this week, and then it will be back to the final push to complete George Washington and his staff.
Beautiful looking miniatures sir!
ReplyDeleteThanks Michal. It was nice to get them completed.
DeleteThey come on horses too?! Glorious as always Lawrence.
ReplyDelete"...before my AWI project is completed" amazing and well above average productivity!
Best wishes, James
Not very many of them though, James. I'm slowly progressing through the last of this project, but the few terrain pieces I am doing as a bit of a diversion have taken much longer than I thought they would.
DeleteYour painted AWI Continental Light Dragoons look great!
ReplyDeleteCheers Phil. I'm now eyeing off a 15mm Ghaznavid army as my next project.
Delete:o) oh really? awesome! question is which 15s to use Essex, Old Glory or even forge in battle figures which have great details. I have painted 2 x DBA Ghaznavid armies need to work on a third for/play big three DBA option rules, mind you I also play DBM. looking at DBM book 3 not many elephants about 5 but Reg (S) Ghulams Cavalry about 16 elements would be a nasty sight on the table top... cheers for now
DeleteI went with Forged in Battle as I have painted a few of their figures in the past and wanted an excuse to do an entire army of their figures. We played them once before using stand-in figures and liked the look of the list, and then I saw your army which finally tipped me over the edge.
Deletethat's ah fine ah looin' ah cavalry! 😁
ReplyDeleteThanks Stew. Few in numbers, but I'm sure they will be welcome when they make an appearance.
DeleteTwo fab looking units of horse! Nicely painted Lawrence!
ReplyDeleteThanks Ray. It was a bit different painting single piece cavalry figures.
DeleteSplendid looking colonial light dragoons, Lawrence! Terrain distractions? I am on the edge of my seat. Did Big Lee's recent vid on Terrain and his "More is More" mantra tip you over to terrain works?
ReplyDeleteSuperb dragoons Lawrence. You are right about the pistol carrying trooper being a great pose. Fabulous brush work as usual.
ReplyDeleteLovely looking cavalry Lawrence - and you may just have inspired me to have a break from WW2 Soviets and head back to my AWI Americans, of which I have 3 or 4 assembled battalions awaiting a paint job.... maybe I could paint them before buying anything new?!
ReplyDelete