Inspired to paint plastic army men for miniature wargaming
Homemade Miniatures, Plastic Army Men April 14th, 2007Hi, this is just a quick update. If you like this article let me know what else you want to see by clicking here. I enjoyed this article and painting the army men and am interested in what else you’d like to see. Thanks.
I was inspired by the Miniature Gaming podcast and its sister page at Universeofbattle.com to try out the suggestions there to paint my own plastic army men miniatures for wargaming. I’ve just started with the primer portion of painting my plastic army men, trying to follow the instructions. I think this may be interesting because I have no experience with miniature wargame figures and certainly not painting them, and even though miniature waragame purists may find it apalling to call my little green army men “wargaming miniatures,” remember, I have to start somewhere. Give me time. Please.
I also want to say that I do not know the gentleman that created the pages above, but am thankful for them. I hope he will be please with how I have followed his lead. I’ve already made my first mistake, however. We’ll see what happens.
First are the army men themselves. While you can get plastic army men online at Amazon for a few dollars, I found a dollar store, where everything really was a dollar and they just happened to have army men. I bought them immediately…that and a piggy bank which I had been looking for (they’re hard to find!) So I paid one dollar, not counting the hawg bank.
As you can see from this picture my first mistake was to get the wrong color paint. Of all the easy things to do and almost foolproof point to follow, I got flat brown instead of flat black paint for my primer. I guess I’m going color blind because in Wal-Mart it looked like black to me. When I sprayed it on, my son said, “Hey, that looks brown.” Well, that’s because it is. Actually, it is the camouflage Krylon paint with “Fusion” to bond to plastic. What can I say? It was all they had and I wanted to paint. It looked black so I bought it. Here are the plastic army men pictures painted flat-brown (click the images to enlarge):
One thing I discovered was that you have to turn the plastic army man over to get underneath him. I know that sound silly to note, but I didn’t think about it until I saw him. Here’s my hot dog cooker coat hanger contraption to hold the drying miniatures:
I was able to find acrylic paint for flesh, hunter green, but not sandstone and dark brown opaque. I used colors that looked close. I also added a little. I tried to add as much detail as possible. One thing that I did was put inca metallic gold on the ammo belt of the machine gunner. The image is blurry to show the belt, not much depth of field here:
Both Finished with before and after:
Before and after single shot:
More close ups. See how we followed more of the original blog inspiration (thank you). We used Thyme, Oregano, and Tarragon leaves for the terrain the army men were standing or walking on. Tarragon leaves are the long leaves and you can see them up close here as a nice effect:
Another touch was using the spice on this model and not simply gluing the grass (spice) to the base of the little “military model,” but also augmenting the sculpting of the figure. Even though the figures are cheap, I wanted to get all I could out of them. Here in this picture you can see the sculpture simulates walking, motion. To make that seem real, instead of just dumping grass on the army man’s base, I carefully put some of the grass on his foot, as if he were really walking. You’ll also see his canteen is a lighter green and his belt brown. I mixed a little bit of the colors to get the green. I believe the brown was brown oxide, while the boots are licorice. We were also careful to put the flesh acrylic paint across the neck, underneath the helmet.:
Front side of the army man. I admit the eyes look funny, and I stopped and didn’t add chest hair:
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For our first attempt at painting miniatures, it looks like we did okay. I’ve been to hobby stores and seen the paint jobs on Warhammer and other figures, and while our painted plastic army men don’t look like the front of a Flames of War box, they do look as good as some “homemade” paint jobs. Sure, we’ve got a long way to go, but it is fun to paint these miniature wargaming figures. I wish I were young enough to dedicate time to it (read I have kids now.) It’s quite relaxing, actually, to concentrate on the painting. The total cost of everything was about eight dollars and some change, but I had a few of the acrylic paints already (licorice and light green), along with the Elmer’s glue and paint brushes. In any case, here’s the miniatures studio:
recently, unfortunately, I found the original post link are gone. I have kept them here for history.
We haven’t used them in play yet, but we’ll get there. Thanks again for the inspiring post on the blog and his podcast.
More plastic army men:
144 TOY SOLDIERS - SEALED BAG of Assorted Combat Positions - Lots of FUN!
April 21st, 2007 at 2:33 am
John — you did a great job. I don’t think the brown primer is a problem at all. They turned out great!
The bases look super, too. The spices really do end up looking like scale leaves and grass.
I also like your comments about how relaxing it is to paint miniatures. Isn’t that amazing? I am not sure what the psychology is behind it, but whenever I feel tense or anxious, even 15 minutes of painting miniatures makes me feel better. Go figure.
Thanks for your kind words about my podcast and website. I am honored that you credited me with the inspiration, but you certainly did the work. Keep it up!
Regards,
Dave
June 2nd, 2007 at 4:54 pm
do you paint bases too?
June 24th, 2007 at 12:52 am
On these we primed them and only put the spices on the miniatures bases. I didn’t see a need to paint them because, but it may have been a good idea. I guess it would depend upon the look I was trying to achieve.
Thanks for the comment. Sorry it took so long to approve them.
July 24th, 2007 at 5:11 am
Hello, just wanted to say your models look great and that I have also made a game using Army Men. Mine are the WW2-Vietnam era. Trying to paint them up modern. Good job!
July 24th, 2007 at 6:34 am
Good job. I have a wargames figure painting service in Bangladesh and I use these plastic army men to train my painters. They are really cheap and damn useful for my purposes.
I’m collecting the finished figures to start wargames clubs over here. One lady I know runs a community centre where she wants me to host a club for poor kids in the neighbourhood. I’m going to set them up with figures, some free rules from the internet, dice and a bit of home made terrain. Hopefully I can inspire some Bangladeshi wargamers.
Cheers
Neil
July 26th, 2007 at 4:06 pm
Jeremiah, thanks for the kind comments. Maybe you can post your figures on your website somewhere in the future.
Neil, Your figures on your website look great. I’m not at that level yet and probably never will be. Your name contains the link to your site. That should be a good reference for you as you requested. Thanks.
August 13th, 2007 at 8:11 pm
Try using the Dip technique on them, before adding spices to the bases. Do a search on TMP, for, “The Dip”, and you will find plenty of information on it. It basically is a washing technique, wherein you apply a dark wash, which collects in the folds of the miniatures, which gives a shadow in the recesses. It will take your figures up a few notches in appearance, for very little effort. You don’t need to use Tudor (black) color, as Royal Walnut (dark brown) is what I use, and it looks very good. Tudor is typically only available from hardware stores, where Royal Walnut is available from most every DIY store. With regards to the ammo belts color, I use bronze or gold, whatever I can find in craft paints. Remember it will be darkened by the Dip, so don’t worry if it is too bright out of the bottle. Cheers!
September 28th, 2007 at 2:06 am
This is an awesome technique to use. I have been employing it with my Combat Storm miniatures and battles look a lot more dramatic! Thanks!
September 28th, 2007 at 10:40 pm
Thanks. I plan on doing some more. It’s just so hard to dedicate time to it. I just got Battletech though, so I may be working on that.
March 15th, 2008 at 9:35 pm
what materials do you need to make the WWW5 battle scene. I’d really like to make this.
March 18th, 2008 at 1:00 am
Well, I didn’t really make a diorama, so I can’t answer all of it. Since that time a mini diorama of point du hoc was made by my son. He painted regular army men like here and used cardboard, acrylic paint, and plastic battle field pieces like sandbag like structures.
One thing we did was to use the product Realistic Water. It actually hasn’t dried yet so I don’t know what it will look like for sure. I guess I should put up pictures of the world war ii diorama.
March 18th, 2008 at 9:44 am
that would be great
April 7th, 2008 at 2:06 pm
How do u play wargaming?
April 12th, 2008 at 2:11 am
Just by any rules we like. There are many selections for miniatures and wargaming. Thanks for the comment.
May 6th, 2008 at 12:46 am
Great first effort! You might want to check Home Depot for Valspar plastic primer: it comes in clear so you won’t need to re-paint any uniforms. And get ye to a craft store and pick-up a flock of Ceramcoat craft paints (just make sure the bottle says “opaque”). Here’s a couple of useful links if you want to pursue plastics:
http://www.plasticsoldierreview.com/
http://15mmvsf.bagofmice.com/paint/dip.html
http://www.baueda.com/plastikornar/painting_guide.html
First rule: have fun!
Good luck,
Bob
May 8th, 2008 at 11:52 pm
I used this technique on most of the soldiers I use to play the Combat Storm wargame and the game is so much better! It’s a heck of a lot better to look at on the gaming table. Thanks for the guide!
May 10th, 2008 at 11:05 pm
Thanks for the nice comment folks. I’ll check out the primer. The Krylon goes on kind of thick. Thanks again.
October 15th, 2008 at 10:10 pm
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