Thursday 22 November 2012

Bedsit Revolutionaries

We interrupt this gripping 1970's saga...... I found a set of  1/72 scale 1970'ish furniture on eBay from a European company called Lone Wulf Miniatures. Thought it was perfect for adding a bit of 3D depth to Operation Pantheon style house raids or impromptu 'cover' on the streets.


Comes on a sprue. Very nice, crisp, clean casting too! Quite impressed. Nothing you can't make yourself with plasticard and some Green Stuff to make the sofa but coming in less than a fiver including postage it takes all that bother away. Not done anything with it yet, so here's a promo shot I found on the interweb.

Looking around for additional items to supplement this purchase I found more 20mm WW2 orientated furniture at C-P Models (TQD Castings Moveable Objects) and Frontline Wargaming's Blitz Bits. If you know of others please let me know.


If you are looking to repeat this yourself, don't worry about the age of common items such as wardrobes, chests of drawers and comfy chairs. Despite being WW2 era, older furniture styles survived through the seventies and beyond in flats, bedsits and even family homes, often mixed with newer styles.

Still with me......? Right, I have created some CQB house clearing rules for Cold War: 1983 and now running them through the USEME Modern Warfare blender to see how they fit there.

Now you may have been thinking that the Kebab House drama has just been a lame effort at amateur writing? Far from it. The Tate/Kebab House storyline has propelled us back into the miniature world of 1979-80 Britain with gusto. Inspired, I've taken an old set of my own rules - The Odd Angry Shot and 'lifted' them to become a system from tracking down Rhodesian guerrillas in the bush to running a manhunt on the streets of London. But you know, now I've opened pandora's box with The Odd Angry Shot, I'm keen to get back to some bush warfare skirmish gaming as a result.

And then at a very natural point in the gaming story surrounding the Grey Cortina - which I still need to blog up - it seemed only natural to utilise the original system for a police car chase in the best traditions of Police Camera Action "Right! Right! Right!"


Cheers
Mark
  

11 comments:

  1. Great and interesting posting this. That furniture is very nice.

    I would be keen to see what you do with the blender on USEME Modern Warfare at cleaning house.

    GBS

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  2. Nice stuff. Must pick up some of my own.

    BTW- here is Lone Wolf's main website:

    http://www.lonewulfmodels.co.uk/

    There is a set of bedroom furniture also listed.

    Cheers,

    Pete.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Pete

      So they do...
      http://www.lonewulfmodels.co.uk/view_product.php?c_id=25&sc_id=42&p_id=522

      Bit steep though, but given me some food for thought.

      Cheers
      Mark

      Delete
  3. I wonder what do you think about this point of view on causes of the Falklands war?
    Nice post, btw.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Going to war to distract joe public from domestic issues is an age old tactic.

      I'm not convinced that the Falklands was a deliberate smoke and mirrors job. Any distraction from domestic crises would appear to be a collateral benefit.

      The Argies essentially put their foot in it by publishing to the world the humiliating photos of NP8901 being taken into captivity. Thatcher had to respond or this would be the Winter of '82 blog.

      Anyway, Falklands anniversary is over, all done and dusted as far as we're concerned. The only hill battles we're fighting now are in the Black Mountains and Brecon Beacons.

      Cheers
      Mark

      Delete
  4. Here, have an award! You got the Liebster blog award, check out the details at http://figurfanatikern.blogspot.se/2012/11/and-liebster-award-goes-to.html

    ReplyDelete
  5. Again some good stuff Mark, I'll be buying. Dougie

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  6. Mig do a 1/72 scale set

    http://www.netmerchants.co.uk/product.php/15304/furniture

    ReplyDelete