Japanese January

I’ve been in contact for a few months with John over at Just Needs Varnish!, over which time we decided to tackle some of our respective Japanese backlog. He had some turn of the 19th century Japanese forces in need of painting, and I’d been sitting on a collection of unpainted Sengoku era miniatures for a couple of years.

I decided to kick off my Sengoku collection with some spear Ashigaru. The models are from Perry Miniatures and come in boxes of 6 metal miniatures so what you see in the photo above is two boxes of spearmen and a lieutenant from the ashigaru command box also by Perry.

The resulting odd block of 13 models works well for my current target rules system for playing this era: a repurposing of the MESBG ruleset. It’s one of my favourite skirmish systems and I think lends itself very well to historical gaming. The game system is very flexible and makes it easy to represent mixed units as the models are individually placed and moved. In MESBG you pick armies by assembling warbands lead by character models, with 12 models lead by a minor “hero” being pretty standard for the game. This means this group of 13 above makes for a nice warband.

If you’re familiar with the period you might have recognised the mon (emblem) of Clan Hōjō, with it’s three triangles (representing fish scales if I understand rightly!). I decided to go with this clan as I visited some the region they ruled over during my first visit to Japan back in 2015 and really liked it, it’s one of my fondest memories from that trip. In fact the foggy forest photo I’ve been using as a backdrop to my miniature photos for quite a while now was taken there! So the backdrop is very appropriate for these models.

Painting-wise these were relatively simple, with the black and blue scheme heavily reliant on Vallejo’s Dark Sea Blue. I used it both for the cloth areas and the highlights on the black, just mixing in different levels of pale greys in for highlights to differentiate them. For the skin I followed the recipes in my previous Samurai post.

I was planning on tackling some buildings I 3D printed early in the month but simply ran out of time, so they will appear on the blog at a later date when I get around to them!

John got some great results out of our themed painting month, painting some very nice cavalry and some matching infantry that you can see pictured above. Overall this was a fun exercise, and got me to paint some models which I had no immediate plans to tackle which is always a nice plus! So thanks John for the motivation, and I recommend you all go check out the models John painted (and generally follow his blog, lots of great stuff on there).

The Six Samurai

A week or so ago I watched Kurosawa’s Ran and after that unsurprisingly felt the need to paint some samurai! Luckily for me a little over a year ago I ordered from Perry Miniatures a small force of Sengoku period Japanese with the intent of painting them up for an as yet undecided system (Hail Caesar is an option, and so is Clash of Katanas). Alongside these I ordered this set of unarmoured samurai, and it’s these I decided to paint up.

These were a nice break from the Warhammer models I’ve been painting recently, even if they were somewhat challenging. I have no real plans for these models beyond a fun painting experience at the moment as they don’t really fit with the rest of the models I ordered which are armoured for war, but after seeing the costumes in Ran I knew I wanted to paint some kimonos!

For the colours and the patterns on these I used a book of Japanese wood block paintings I had at home as a reference, never directly copying patterns but generally inspiring myself from them. Most of the colours I saw in these were blue/red/green alongside white and black, hence the scheme you see on these.

You can see I got adventurous on some of these and kept others rather simple. I’d say it’s nice to have some variety, but truth is some of these patterns were rather tricky to replicate consistently and I didn’t want to do that too many times!

The skin on these was a bit of an experiment as I’d never tried to paint Asian skin tones before. I’m pretty satisfied with the results so I’ll record them here for when I get to painting the army!

Acronyms: VMC – Vallejo Model Color, VGC – Vallejo Game Color, GW – Citadel/Games Workshop,

  1. Basecoat: VMC English Uniform
  2. Wash: GW Reikland Fleshshade
  3. Highlight: VMC English Uniform
  4. Highlight: 50/50 VMC English Uniform/VGC Barbarian Flesh
  5. Highlight: VGC Barbarian Flesh
  6. Glaze: 50/50 Reikland Fleshshade/GW Contrast Medium
  7. Highlight: VGC Barbarian Flesh

The basing is a mix of Woodland Scenics foam flocks and GW static flock as well as some crushed up dead leaves for colour.

These are likely the last models I’ll paint in 2023, and not a bad way to finish the year! Plenty to look forward to in 2024, with the release of the relaunch of Warhammer Fantasy (as The Old World!) confirmed for the start of the year. I hope everyone has a lovely new year celebration and I’ll likely post next in January some time!