First off, I'll wish anyone and everyone reading this blog a very HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Next are some pics of various conversions back from the talented Igwargminis, AKA: Ig, AKA: Igor Olshansky. Included are a couple of conversions I have yet to put up a post about -- a WOODBINE DESIGN "WWI In the East" BRITISH CASUALTY SET (available from Gripping Beast: LINK). I swapped the peaked-cap head of the kneeling chaplain offering the wounded solider some cigarettes out for a Glengarry-wearing head from the Empress Miniatures Zulu War ACCESSORIES RANGE. I also converted an additional kneeling figure offering a sip from his water-bottle, putting one of Woodbine's WOUNDED HEADS (available here: LINK) onto the body of a kneeling Wargames Foundry Indian mountain gunner, whose own head had already been donated to create the Sikh orderly for General Roberts! I removed the ramrod from his hand and replaced it with a spare WATER-BOTTLE from the same Empress Miniatures Accessories range.
The other thing in these pics that I have yet to blog about is converting the turbans of Perry Sudan Bombay/Bengal Infantry into 1880 Bombay Grenadiers, wearing uncovered turbans with visible folds, kullahs sticking up in the middle and one end of their wrapped lungis poking out in front. It's a simple conversion process, all focused on the figure's headgear. Doing it twice for my pair of standard bearers was no problem at all, but doing it for an entire unit -- which I'm still in the midst of -- has been more of a challenge. When the entire unit is done I'll put up a post about how I did it, in case anyone wants the details. I took a few pics with the converted Bombay Grenadier NCO side-by-side with the version that came straight-out-of-the-box. The British officer has a puggaree inspired by a waist-sash worn by a member of the regiment in this illustration from a decade or two later:
I found it on the British Battles Maiwand page. If interested, you can find it about halfway down the page, on the right-hand side: LINK.
The pics below are the first I've ever taken OUTSIDE, rather inside my garage. I lugged one of the terrain boards out to the driveway and set up the figures, while the sun was still out. I think the natural light looks good. On the other hand, I wish I had a camera with true "selective" focus, since no matter how hard I tried to use the touch-screen select, my iPhone camera kept wanting to focus on the ground cover as much as the figures, but I think the ones below turned out okay.