Wolves for all occasions are ready to romp at last! For the last several years, whenever I bought minis from a company that had wolves, I would buy them to build up variety for the great wolf pack for Sleepy Hollow. They got trimmed and primed as they came in, then set aside for painting later. Finally figured that there was enough critical mass of wolves to paint and base them to have ready for Silver Bayonet as well.
Freshly finished — young wolves, regular wolves, large wolves, and giant wolves (and a little black goat too).
Currently, there are several projects on the workbench, including a few 1809 Brunswickers from Steve Barber. The basic soldiers are the ubiquitous shouldered arms marching up and down the square types.
With a bit of work, they can be re-posed. the metal is a little harder than I would prefer for such work, but do-able. My trusty #16 blade was critical for the heavy leaning into the cutting.
Because this metal is fairly hard and brittle, the second one snapped while bending. The right arm broke above the elbow while bending it back to reach for the cartridge box. The left arm broke at the wrist while bending it to hold the cradled musket. But then it was easy to glue the pieces back right where I wanted them.
Now they are in more interesting poses for skirmish gaming. They just need a little putty to finish them up.