Making Life Difficult: George Asling on Building Sarissa Precision’s Mediterranean Farm
Hi, I’m Paul, and welcome to the 2019 season of Sculpting, Painting and Gaming. This year we’re building on the foundations laid in 2018 as…
Hi, I’m Paul, and welcome to the 2019 season of Sculpting, Painting and Gaming. This year we’re building on the foundations laid in 2018 as…
Hi, I’m Paul, and welcome to Sculpting, Painting and Gaming. One of the most impressive features of Gangs of Rome is its environment. Many are…
Hi, I’m Paul, and welcome to Sculpting, Painting and Gaming. Today’s missive for the masses is provided by Mister Steve Beckett. Many of you will…
Hi, I’m Paul, and welcome to Sculpting, Painting and Gaming, the blog of hobby life goals. I bought my first miniatures in the mid-eighties, and…
Today I’m going to share my guide to painting skin. The face is one of the most important parts of a figure, so it deserves a lot of attention.
Nothing says Saga to me as loudly and fiercely as the word ‘Vikings’.
I’ve faced The fury of the Northmen many times when playing Saga, often whilst suffering another crushing defeat.
Wood, metal, cloth, skin, facial hair and fancy shield designs are the main things you will need to paint in your Dark Age army.
Rome is many things to many people, and in this article we will look at one way to paint MDF kits from Sarissa Precision’s excellent Streets of Rome range.
After ordering my new Early Saxon Skirmish Warband, I set myself the somewhat ambitious goal of completing the whole lot—from bare metal to ready for the battlefield—in a week.
I want to show how easily you can paint your Gangs of Rome miniatures to a tabletop standard and, in doing so, spend less time painting and more time playing.