2mm ACW, it seemed like a great idea at the time 
these were produced by Irregular 
and, given the size, are really quite nice 
the little terrain bits are what really sold me! 
my friend Garrie painted the Confederates 
(heroically painting the stars and bars on the tiny flags) 
1/1200scale Fort Sumter
frankly, I'm not even sure why I bought this 
we weren't gaming ACW naval in that scale
perhaps an early manifestation of my fort fetish
it is a ruddy great lump of resin, over 6" across 
it came with cannon
but the ones from Thoroughbred were SO much prettier! 
it is a good looking model 
of Fort Sumter in the "before" state 
5mm Napoleonics 
sometimes an interesting figure will lead me down a rabbit-hole 
when I first saw that Stone Mountain was offering these 5mm (6mm?) 
figures I thought to myself; "I can finally do a battalion at 1:1 scale! 
as with so many of my projects
 I got about 1/3 of thew way through before burning out 
somewhere along the way I painted a bunch of British 
these are Heroics and Ros 5mm 
the Stone Mountain figures are rather nice, just too small! 
true to form I found it much easier to but figures than to paint them 
additional French and British infantry 
supported by loads of cavalry 
which look very good painted up! 
it seems that I bought an entire Austrian Army from Irregular at some point 
gotta have guns, lots of them!
Lord only know where they all came from 
5mm ACW
another Irregular product, 
I got the Union troops finished before losing steam
not "pretty" by modern standards but they are effective en-masse 
5mm Seven Years War
hey look! another fort!
Heroics and Ros with wagons from GHQ 
I got more than halfway through this project, 
probably because there was a fort involved 
this is where production stalled 
they paint up surprisingly well
mind you these are really 5mm tall, not like modern 8mm tall figures 
my basing was primitive in the early 80's 
they look particularly good in large groups
and absolutely smashing on a fortress wall! 
I nicked the carraige-mounted cannon from an old boat model that I found at a garage sale
1/1200 scale Ship of the Line 
I got a couple dozen finished before I gave up,
it only takes a minute to buy them, it takes hours to paint and assemble them 
the real stalling point was when I tried to assemble fleets for the  War of 1812 on the Great Lakes 
then of course there were these lovely ocean-going giants
Crimson Skies 
last but not least Crimson Skies,
 it was jolly fun in the two games that I got into at conventions
 but I could never get anybody else in the group to bite 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 

 
  
 
The trick is to go back and do small amounts rather than sell them. Flitting from one project to another when you get tired/bored keeps them all chugging along. Slowly, but surely, you'll come to the end. Don't give up. Just park it to the side and remember it for the next project bored time. From one who has had the same problem but is clearing the lead pile. Another thing. Don't buy any figures until you finish what you have.
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