Showing posts with label Happy Anniversary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happy Anniversary. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Roundwood's Wordle 2012

Here's a harmless (and some may say utterly pointless) bit of fun, and an echo from last year. I put the URL of my blog from the last few weeks into Wordle and came up with this ...


I did the same last year after Big Lee started the ball rolling and the change over 12 months, and particularly since Christmas, is pretty obvious. Great War to Dark Ages in one easy step.

No real surprise I guess, but lots of fun all the same. Have a go yourself, maybe - you'll enjoy it.

Seeing some of the Wordles in the gallery on the Wordle website is always fun - be warned though, it's a time sink!

More Wordle-ing in 12 months time, folks. Normal (non-frivalous) service will be resumed this weekend.

Sunday, 13 March 2011

Thirty Years Ago …

I don’t remember precisely where I bought it, except that it was somewhere in Hull. I do remember when it was – sometime in February 1981. It was my first wargaming magazine. I have a dim memory of hunting through the magazine shelves to find it. It was on the other side of the shelves from the Radio Times, and absolutely nowhere near the comics I usually bought.


At first sight it really didn’t look very inspiring. “Military Modelling”. A picture of what I thought looked like a pretty unexciting Bren Gun Carrier on the front cover. I didn’t want detailed transports, I wanted wargames figures. Where on earth were they? I felt a little cheated, but after all I had been told by Mr Farrar, the teacher at school who ran the wargames club, that “Military Modelling” was the magazine I should get if I wanted wargames figures. I wasn’t going to argue with that.

When I got home, and looked through the magazine, I realised what Mr Farrar was on about. It wasn’t so much the feature articles (Painting Tartans, British Light Cavalry Equipment 1800-1815), as the shorter articles which got me excited. Wargames Briefing, Across the Board, Observation Post … these were articles about wargaming, about how to get started, about what to buy, and about what was good and what was really good.

And there were adverts. Lots of adverts. They sold everything from D&D miniatures (CF1 Cleric with Mace – 25 pence), to micro scale infantry (85 pence for 50 Saxon Fyrd) to a mail order company called Games Workshop selling everyone else’s board games and just three or four of their own. I wonder what happened to those guys?

I didn’t make a note of how long I read the February 1981 copy of “Military Modelling”, but I don’t think I’ve ever read a magazine quite as closely. I knew where every advert was on every page, and knew as much about painting tartans and “The Miniatures of Pete Kailus” as the good Mr Kailus himself possibly.

After I’d read the magazine, my friends from the school wargames club read it. And, in the end, after long discussions we worked out what we were going to buy. By that time the original magazine had started to fall apart, the front cover got ripped in a school bag and someone started writing in the margins which figures they wanted. So the photos here are from a copy I picked up on Ebay in a flush of nostalgia in January.

And what did we buy? Oh yes, well, here they are – the very first wargames figures I ever painted.

They're 25mm Lamming Miniatures medievals. Although the Lamming Miniatures advert in the magazine is deeply uninspiring and mentioned only “multi-purpose figures”, Bill Lamming’s workshop was close by in Hull and Bill’s advert gave his telephone number. We’d seem Bill’s figures at the school club (thank you again, Mr Farrar !) and we’d wanted to get our own. Me and my friend Mike cycled across Hull to the workshop in Wincolmlee on a cold March morning Saturday morning, and collected a package of figures each. I didn’t realise it at the time, but these were the very first foothills of the lead mountain, and the start of a hobby which I would love for the rest of my life.

And, alongside the first figures I painted, are the most recent ones from the trench raiders project which I’ve just finished yesterday. Ok, so sculpting, basing, paints and painting have come along a bit in the last thirty years, but there’s no way I am ever parting with the old timers.


Thirty years in, and no sign of stopping now !

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