Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => The Conflicts that came in from the Cold => Topic started by: Rickf on May 18, 2023, 07:48:22 AM
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Couple of USMC by Gringo40s, these were the first of many, I was just experimenting with different paint colours, happy with these but will do a few with more faded clothes and a few with darker.
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top paintwork Rick :o :-*
love the basing as well
and the overall muted painting
works a treat! :D
regards
Ged
www.gringo40s.com
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They look good to me!
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Very nice.
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Definitely nicely done, it's the little details that make them pop
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Thanks for the kind comments everyone. VC next, does anyone know if the scarves they wore were also in recognition colours or just random individual taste. I've seen the red and blue recognition strips on the sleeves.
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great painting !
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Thanks for the kind comments everyone. VC next, does anyone know if the scarves they wore were also in recognition colours or just random individual taste. I've seen the red and blue recognition strips on the sleeves.
I've seen both but the dark blue seems to the most popular. I'm no expert so I could be wrong.
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Thanks for the kind comments everyone. VC next, does anyone know if the scarves they wore were also in recognition colours or just random individual taste. I've seen the red and blue recognition strips on the sleeves.
A variety existed, most frequently versions of the traditional checked khăn rằn scarf, which comes in a variety of colours: black and white, blue and white, red and white and even green and white. That said there are also photos of scarves/sweat rags in solid colours and apparently the camo pattern US parachute was a popular source of donor material (you also see this used for capes).
I've read that the way the scarf was knotted and worn was used as a field sign to determine friendlies over foes. The guides at Cu Chi said the same thing so maybe it's true but probably irrelevant to 28mm minis either way.
Possibly for particular ops scarves may have been worn in particular colours, just as recognition flashes were used from time to time. In addition to the patches used at Hue If you look at footage of the liberation of Saigon, there are troops shown wearing solid red armbands. On the other side of the equation Australian troops occasionally wore field recognition signs in their bush hats, most frequently the pull-through flannelette threaded through the loops in the hat.
I've tended to go with a mix of solid and black/blue and white checks for mine. I converted some Khmer Rouge a few years ago and went red/white with their near identical kramas.
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A few more
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Other pics
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C
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Very nice work.
I had to check they were not 40mm.
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more excellent work Rick :o :-* :o 8) :) :)
regards
Ged
www.gringo40s.com
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Lovely stuff. :-* :-*
Brickies paradise. Well, after from Billericay that is. ;)
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Thanks everyone
Brickies paradise
Indeed, they need to get Dennis, Neville and Oz in when the Marines have finished with the city lol
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They'd do but I hear that Billericay Dicky ain't no bleedin' thicky when it comes to laying a course or two.