Tuesday, 13 October 2015

WAS Savoy flags 2


Here's the second flag for Savoy, do much for having a break on drawing eagles.  I'm going to do a bit more wok on the field of this flag as I'm not too happy on how it looks  following it being scanned. The figure is a Hungarian from Front Rank; I think I need to get my hands on a couple of  the correct figures.
 

Sunday, 11 October 2015

Savoy Regiment Piedmont War of Austrian Succession WAS

I painted this flag to get a break from drawing Hapsburg Eagle's which is proving to be a bit of a task. There's a lot of colourful flags and easy on the eye flags for Savoy in the WAS so will do a few more of these as I go along. The colonel's flag for the Piedmont Regt will be next and I'll have to have a go at the Guard's Regt's flag as it's a topper.

cheers Pete


Monday, 5 October 2015

More Austrian SYW flags

Here's another couple of completed flags for the Austrians taken from a print by Knotel

 

Sunday, 27 September 2015

15mm Austrian SYW

15mm Eureka Austrian's carrying  the second completed SYW flag



Close up of the flag; the lighting's pretty crappy on this pic and the flags is a lot 'greener' in the flesh


Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Seven Years War Austrian

Hungarian Regimental flag

Hungarian Colonel's Colour

Due to personal circumstances it's been a while since I posted anything on here however here's the beginnings of my SYW flags that will eventually cover the Austrian's and Russians. at the outset of the war the Austrian flags appear to have several variations on a basic theme and as the war progressed the flags became pretty standardised. I'll be focusing on the earlier flags as there's more variety. The figures in the pics are by Front Rank however my armies will be in 15mm and I just need to decide whether to go for Eureka or Blue Moon. There'll be more WOR and Burgundian's soon and the Landsknecht flags are getting a revamp.

cheers Pete

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Step by step guide to putting together Inkjet Printed Cloth Flags

Hi here's a brief guide to putting together cloth flags. Firstly there's two golden rules and these are be patient and keep your hands clean. 

The image above is not hand painted and has been borrowed from Google and other  quartering the flag and some black lines to emphasis the quartering and the addition  of some colour to fill the two halves of the flag  where it wraps around the pole it's unaltered. However I have made  a schoolboy error and forgot to reverse the obverse of the flag. 

The Cloth sheets come with an inkjet friendly coating on one side of the sheet. The flag above has been printed on a standard Inkjet Desktop Printer using the Dark, High Quality and Gloss Photo settings  and having the paper set at gloss photo paper.

In short due to the highly absorbent nature of the cloth you need to get plenty of ink onto the sheet. Once printed leave the flag to dry for at least 30 mins as the image is prone to scratching  whilst it is drying, this is especially true of the sheets that come with a backing sheet adhered to them.

After the sheet has dried give the flag one or two very light coats of spray varnish, Humbrol or Plasticode clear are ideal for this, then leave the flag to dry , an hour is ideal.  NB don't use brush on varnish as this will cause the image to bleed. 

Paint the reverse with white acrylic paint, leave to dry

putting the cloth flags together I find Pritt stick or similar the best to use, just cut the flag out with a sharp craft knife and straight edge (a blunt one will tear and stretch the sheet) then fold the flag in half. Apply the glue to one side of the unprinted image and leave for a couple of minutes to get tacky. 

stick together using a light source; usually the window, to line it up. finally leave the flag to dry and once it has you can shape it, see below:

Paint the edges of the flag to match the field as there's nothing worse that bits of white showing on a finished flag. At this stage it's worth running a bit of paint up edge where the flag is wrapped around the pole as due to the nature of the weave of the cloth the printable coating can crack when stressed; painting this area also helps to highlight and gives a quality touch to the finished flag.

The finished cloth flag: D'Este family from around 1450.

Monday, 8 June 2015

print your own cloth flags

hi, I've managed to source some inkjet printer friendly cloth that 's a doddle to use without having any technical knowhow so I'll be starting to sell blank sheets so people can print their own flags from their own designs. To illustrate this the flag illustrated have not been hand painted  but taken from google and manipulated slightly.  The design has been taken from this excellent site of Italian re-enactors.http://www.famaleonis.com/ please have a look the gallery  images are superb.


Hi, I've placed the printable cloth up for sale on Ebay  for th eprice of 33 for one sheet, £13:00 for five and £25  for 10 sheets, here's the link to my listings if anyone's interested: petesflags