As careful readers of the blog will recall, I’ve been in the process of putting together a fleet of late Medieval / early Renaissance ships. For figures I chose the 1/2400 “Christians and Corsairs” line put out by Figurehead Ships. (They also have Napoleonics, Spanish Armada, and an “Iron and Steam” 19th century line.) I got mine from The Last Square, located in Madison, WI; they have a very nice web-store so ordering online is very easy.
The big negative about these figures is that there aren’t many pictures of them available. Hopefully, this post will overcome that oversight.
I went with 1/2400 scale because a) my painting skills aren’t that great, and I figure there’s not a lot of the sort of detailing work that 1/1200 scale figures would require (rigging? surely you jest), and b) smaller equals more affordable (I got a fleet of 62 ships plus wreckage markers for around $150). The Figurehead ships also come in fleet packs, which makes them even more affordable.
Here are some shots of the figures straight out of the box (click to embiggen):
FR-1: Mediterranean Flagship Galley. Note the unfurled sail piece at the bottom; all of the galleys come with furled sails; you can purchase the unfurled sails separately, which I did for most of mine.
FR-2: Small Mediterranean Galley (x3). You get three of these guys in a package.
FR-4: Mediterranean Galleass.
FR-21: 4 common pinnaces. Some of them have oars, some do not. Each is about a quarter-inch long, and comes as a two-piece cast; the ship and the base are separate.
And now we come at last to my finished products. These were very easy to paint, owing to the lack of lots of detail (although I’m sure someone with better skills than I possess would be able to do an absolutely marvelous job on these guys). The painting took a total of I believe 5 evenings.
Here are the various sorts of galleys, all collected in one shot. For the small Mediterranean galleys, I went with four separate stripe colors on the sails, combined with an individualized color on the rails, flags, and fore and aft castles. That makes identifying the individual ships relatively easy, and doubly easy to have four separate squadrons for games with more than two players. You can see some of the galleys ended up with furled sails.
Here are the various carracks, caravels, and pinaces. I did a similar color scheme with these; within each ship type, each has a unique color on the flags.
As for rules, I decided to do something home-brewed. I started with the fleet rules for Avalon Hill’s old game “Trireme”, but the thing got tinkered with to the point where only the “big picture” still resembles the original; the details are all changed. Hopefully I’ll get a chance to take the rules and figures for a test-drive at this weekend’s wargame day at All-in-One Collectibles in Randolph, NJ. If you’re in the area, please do stop by!
My ultimate goal is to use these figures to do some naval wargaming in the World of Greyhawk. The technological era is just right, and there’s lots of water on that beautiful Darlene map!
Very cool and very motivational for me! I'm in the process of finishing a set of 1:4800 scale minis to create my own Jutland game (I got a copy of the Avalon Hill rules and other materials and am doing the ships as minis rather than just counters).
Anyway, that project has me interested in doing something similar for Peloponnesian War and Medieval era ship miniatures. Your photos make me start to wonderif some later eras might be fun, too!
Those are great! Perfect for my Flashing Blades campaign.
Awesome! That goes on my wish list.