Friday, March 20, 2026

Now in Full Glory - the Completed Spanish Artillery Battery - 1812-1813

Life got in the way again, but the last few elements of the Spanish artillery battery are finally done.

The new elements include gunners servicing the canon as well as in march order, and a supply cart being drawn by oxen.

As with the theme of this project, the gunners wear a variety of uniforms, all painted to a semblance of what may have been worn in 1812-1813.  The uniforms were largely patterned on the French style, so in this case the pre-1812 French uniform included the lace and flounders on the shako which the Spanish may have worn.

These have the more simplified 1812 French style uniform with some painted on modifications, but the key difference is the lack of shako lace.

I am unsure of the make of the oxen, adding yet another manufacturer to this mish mash of makers.

Dick Tennant started the madness of including the artillerymen in march order in all of his batteries, so here I go carrying on the tradition.

The officer illustration I had for reference had only a carrot shaped pompom, but I opted to leave this officer's glorious plume.  I figure there was likely some variation, especially among the officers.

For the soldier's sake I hope these are some well trained oxen!

I added a little bit of custom impedimenta to the standard Hinton Hunt cart load.

There always seem to be more detail on the rear of Napoleonic uniforms than the front!

Lastly, a little tweak to the French 1st Hussar's command stand.  I had originally mounted the Franznap officer in the middle of the command stand, but the style is just too different from the Hinton Hunt sculpting to look quite right.  I hated to hide the jaguar skin saddle cover of the officer in the middle of the command stand, but he just looks too good with his Hinton Hunt compatriots to not put him back amongst them.

Till next time - be good out there and kind to others.


16 comments:

  1. Splendid stuff David…
    The marching crew are a nice touch…
    And the Hussar command is also lovely…

    All the best. Aly

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    1. Thanks Aly. The marching stand is all DT's fault, but I'm glad he went to the trouble. Now that I have done them for the Spanish expansion though, I expect I'll have to go back and retrofit a new stand of Marching gunners to my Old Guard foot battery.

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  2. Super stuff David, they all look great, the little oxen drawn cart with its attendant is a nice piece, like the ide of the marching crew, madness maybe but looks the part. The Hussars are lovely!!

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    1. Thanks Donnie. The ox cart was a fun unplanned addition.

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  3. What a lovely group of figures David. Are we going to see them in action any time soon?

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    1. I wish I could say yes, but at the rate I've been painting, it may still be awhile sadly.

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  4. Absolutely splendid additions!

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    1. Thanks Matt. I was working on a unit of Guerrillas this afternoon as well, and I can't wait to add them to the mix. It will be nice to finally do some irregulars!

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  5. Superb work, David. The battery is fantastic, and the hussars are sublime! Any plans for a parade of the whole regiment?

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    1. Thanks WM. I'll do a parade once the majority of the division is done, at least all of the DT components. I'll be adding a few additional units, but I can parade them before that.

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  6. This is just superb David a labour of love - the ox cart is delightful and the marching gunners... no I won't be following you there!

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  7. David, they’re delightful, and so complete, probably more so than any Spanish battery in real life. Going ‘full on’ with the train in this way is so impressive; I’m impressed!
    As for the front vs back aspect of Napoleonic figures, you surely know my opinion on the baggage carousel.

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    1. Thanks Rob. You'll have to enlighten me as to the baggage carousel analogy...

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  8. PS just got back from a weekend’s gaming, otherwise would’ve commented sooner.

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    1. No worries. I always seem to be last to the party when folks update their blog.

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