Skip to main content

World War 2 Dutch, part 2

Click here for part 1Click here for part 3

Right, so now I have a small 500-ish point Dutch army for Bolt Action! In my previous post I showed my first 12-man infantry squad with a Lewis light machine gun. I have now painted a second squad, as well as some support units.

Much of the May ’40 Miniatures catalogue is currently unavailable, as the moulds seem to have reached the end of their lifespan. I therefore made do with what was available. That means I’ll have to use an NCO model as a stand-in for an officer until those minis become available again. The only field gun currently available is the 47mm Böhler anti-tank gun, so I picked up one of those. Rather interestingly, the gun is modelled to look like its being moved by the crew, which makes for a very dynamic model. I also bought a 3-man mortar team. 

The Landsverk M38 armoured car is also temporarily unavailable, so I got a 3d printed one on Ebay instead. Up close some of the print lines are pretty obvious, but on the table it looks fine. 

There is a very strong possibility that I’ll buy some more minis once they become available again. A heavy machine gun team might be useful, as well as another artillery piece. And those marines with their dark blue overcoats look pretty tempting as well...

WW2 Dutch mortar team

WW2 Dutch mortar team
Medium mortar tean

WW2 Dutch anti-tank gun

WW2 Dutch anti-tank gun

WW2 Dutch anti-tank gun
47mm Böhler anti-tank gun advancing

Landsverk M38 armoured car

Landsverk M38 armoured car
Landsverk M38 armoured car.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

More simple Warhammer 40k terrain: craters and rubble piles

Time for some more simple 40k scenery: craters and rubble piles. Both are pretty easy projects and pretty quick too, if unlike me you plan out your work a little so you don’t need to continuously correct your mistakes along the way! For the craters, I started with two old writeable dvd’s. I first closed off the central holes with mdf miniature bases. I then broke off semi-triangular wedges of cork from a pan coaster and hotglued these to the dvds, forming circles (see the picture below). I then applied wall filler to the craters to hide the mdf circles covering the central holes and to add some texture to the cork. I then glued smaller bits of cork in between the larger wedges and added coffee grounds for texture. After this step I noticed that the cork wedges didn’t look very natural. Tapering them off made them look a lot better (picture below). I then gave everything a coat of black paint:  I still thought the craters didn’t look quite right, though. They were a bit too uniform ...

Gloomhaven characters

Back in the winter of 2020/2021, my wife and I played a lot of Gloomhaven. After several months of playing multiple games a week we put it away for a while, but recently we picked it back up again.  Gloomhaven is probably one of the best tabletop games I’ve played. The only downside in my mind is that it can easily take you 15 minutes to set up a scenario, especially if you don’t invest in some aftermarket box inserts to organise the literally thousands of tiles, tokens, cards and standees. But once you’ve set everything up, the game plays really well. Plus, I really like that it is a cooperative game in which the players need to work together to get through a scenario.   Anyway, the game comes with 18 plastic ‘heroic’ 28 mm or 32 mm scale miniatures. The monochrome grey plastic really stands out against the beautifully colourful floor tiles, so obviously these had to be painted... The plastic is a bit softer than your average model kit, but a lot harder than the soft plas...

Roman watchtower

After wrapping up my wee Roman army with my Roman cavalry unit last month I needed a bit of a change of pace. Designing and scratch building a Roman watchtower to go with my army seemed just the thing.   Most models of Roman watchtowers you find online are based on stone examples like those found along Hadrian’s Wall or in southern Germany. I, however, wanted to build a tower more like those found along the Dutch part of the limes , the border of the Roman Empire. As stone is pretty hard to come by in this tiny flat country of ours, watchtowers were either made entirely out of timber or had a timber frame with inset wattle and daub sections.   I particularly liked the look of the reconstructed watchtower at Vleuten-De Meern, with its dark timber frame and yellow wattle and daub. As you can see, my tower is quite heavily influenced by the Vleuten-De Meern watchtower, although I wasn’t too strict when it came to the exact dimensions. The reconstructed watchtower at Vleuten-...