Saturday, December 21, 2019

New 6mm Star Wars Stormtroopers



 I have just recently picked up some Storm Knights from Wakes Emporium on Shapeways link

Here is my quick review of the figures...

The pros.

The quality of these figures are amazing.  They have all of the details you would expect to find on Imperial Stormtroopers.  The helmet is spot on in design.  The level of detail is amazing.  You can see the "mouth" crack and the eye holes on the helmet.  You can tell what kind of weapon they are carrying. 

It's hard to get closeup pictures to see the details, but here is the best I could do.

The first phot shows some of the pictures with a simple wash.  The second photo shows my poor painting skills, but does a good job of showing how you can pick up the details (if you have the skills)
The other thing that is amazing is the number of variants of the figures.  There are riflemen and light repeating blasters, and even some missile weapons.  Several figs have the shoulder pauldron that marks the officers.  For the light repeating blasters there are 4 or 5 variants, and at least 3 for the missile guys.  For the riflemen and officers it is hard to tell because some of the variants are subtle differences from the others.  I would have never expected to see all f these variants, and it is a wonderful addition to the line!

Now for the cons.

The printed resin is good and does a great job of showing the details of the figures, but at this scale there is occasionally a little graininess.  You have to look close to find it though!  Most will never see it unless you paint with magnifying glasses.  The other downside of the resin printing is that the figs are just a little fragile.  However, I don't know that they are any more fragile than metal 6mm figs.  (I have broken a few of those also).  I have broken two of the figures.  Unfortunately the  officer in the picture above is now KIA.  I broke his weapon off when I was trying to reposition him on the stand.  The glue had partly dried and I tried to remove him, and then "snap".  Another one I broke off of the base when removing him from the sprue.

Conclusion.

These are amazing figures and are a pleasure to paint, and I would highly recommend them to anyone wanting to do Star Wars in 6mm!

Here are some more pics.



With my Darkest Star Rebel Proxies

With my old Rebel and Stormtrooper Proxies

People wander if they work with X-Wing miniatures, and they are a perfect match!

My First finished platoon!












Friday, December 6, 2019

Star Wars 6mm Clone Wars Droids

My Star Wars 6mm quest continues.

I found a person that does Star Wars on Shapeways.  He has a pretty good number of items available right now, all scaled to 6mm.

I prefer the Rebellion era myself, but he has a lot of different items for Clone Wars era.  I decided to buy some to test.  I bought some Battle Droids from Shapeways.  I bought in the smooth, detailed plastic.  I have ordered in the cheaper materials before, but it was a bit grainy.  I think the smooth, detailed looks better.

I am pretty impressed with the details of the droids.  It is hard to do these in 6mm because they have some small parts.  He did a good job of catching enough detail to see them, without making them brittle.

One of my favorite things about them is that there is a lot of variants.  There are several infantry variants, then there are command variants.  Those include guys with binoculars, ones with light repeating blasters (or sniper rifles if you prefer), and rocket launchers.


The only negative complaint that I have is that the sprue that connects them is a little thick and challenging to cut.  I ended up breaking a few of the miniatures when I tried to cut them apart.

Next, I found out that he made some tanks and sold them on eBay.  He printed these himself.  They come in multi parts and require assembly.  It is a little challenging to assemble.  For instance, the turret is three pieces.  There is an upper part and lower part of the hull, then there is the gun.  The body has two parts, the front and the back.  (I should have fixed the joint on this, but didn't realize it was that bad until I painted it).  The two side guns are each two parts and are small.  If you use magnifying glasses they are much easier to assemble.

One of the challenges with assembling them is that they are printed in a translucent resin, and they are pretty small, so it is hard to match up the joints.  Once I started using magnifying glasses it went much better.