The other runners were a matching pair with the 'background soldiery', again for both sides of what would become a cultural cataclysm, for one side at least.
The figures in the set are beautiful, and while modern 3D CAD/CAM processes can take some of the credit for all Presier's modern developments, it's true also that somewhere in the organisation you need people with flair, vision and a sense of imagination - I'm sounding very poncy suddenly, but there's not a lot to add to a few 'sprues' of unpainted figures!
While the reverse has the same figures, fully painted and photographed from both sides as a painting and positioning guide for the various parts.
Although there is also a full instruction sheet included in the set for those who need words and arrows and numbers and things!
It also carries more views of the landing scene, and a rather nicely posed 'plug' for Revell's 1:90th scale Santa Maria model-kit.
Not the first time Preiser and Revell have
worked together; soon after taking over the Elastolin
archive, Preiser licensed the Romans &
Celts, Normans and Saxons of the later, to the former, suitably reduced in size
for their 1:72nd scale polyethylene figure set range.
They have also worked together to get Prieser's excellent FH18 field howitzer,
crew, limber and team simplified for production in the same soft-plastic figure
range.
Due to its release being tied into the
anniversary year, although it was never marketed as a limited edition - to my
knowledge - the Columbus set was nevertheless swiftly withdrawn from the
catalogue and became considered a rarity (despite everyone I know who wanted
one, getting one) carrying the evilBay price premium that such a status comes-with
these days. [frown-ani, angry emoticon!]
However, the bulk of the useful figures from the set are now available in a large unpainted set (16359 - the best way to purchase Preiser, who can be considered very dear as painted sets), along with all sorts of other useful items for medieval war-gamers and dioramists.
Of interest are the re-enactor market
traders and serving wenches in costume or the shop-dummies; which with feet
added (or longer skirts) and heads (of which there is a supply attached to the
'serving wenches') will make lovely additions to the Italieri Tournament sets - as will everything
in these new releases.
Also - at this scale - you can't tell if
the dealers stalls have been kit-built with s coach-bolts, or lovingly
hand-built with blacksmiths nails, so all the various structures can go
straight into a medieval diorama or onto a medieval war-game table, while the
Saxons (returning from their loan to Revell?)
are equally useful, if tiresomely 'old hat' now! Set 17216 also seems to
have the accessory-runner from the Columbus set, but the Amerindians are
notable by their absence.
The best bits above are the transparent
green bottles (Rothenburger I'm
sure!), I can see them appearing in the hands of diminutive Panzer-crews or
GI's at modelling shows!
A high-res image scan of the flag carried
by the colonists (Castile?) which is printed on the boxes heavy card end-flaps,
it may be of use to someone as a download, re-size it to about 1x2cm; it's only
meant as a little standard or guidon, for a lance or pole-arm.
5 comments:
There ya go.I´ve been hoping that the columbus set would re-appear and now it turns up again but with bells on! The idios never really interested me, I was after the europeans but wasn´t prepared to pay the "re-morgage the house" Prices offered on evil bay.
Now I know the new sets exist (market etc) I did a quick search (22 euros for 125 bods..bloody bargain and 35 for the market set..another bargain) I found this Little lot
http://world187.blogspot.de/2016/06/le-moyen-age-au-187-mittelalter-187.html
The small lights could have been better hidden but still some good dios using the bods from 16359.
Nice post, that's that mad diorama/museum thing isn't it?
I posted the landshe...landschnec....those mercenaries I can never spell - ages ago (also a Gary Worsfold donation) try Preiser in the tag list?
I have a small collection of Preiser figures that I have been wanting to make posts. I just don't seem to get around to it. Over the years there have been a few Preiser kits I wish I had purchased. However, I cannot say that I have ever seen the likes of these. Nice finds.
Such a shame they never made them in 54mm!
Jan - Cheers! you should blog them, there's a lot to be said about Preiser, so the more people who Blog them the better, even a handful!
Brian - They will! Probably....eventually...if you ask them nicely? Seriously; they do pantograph up and down between scales and may well be encouraged to produce them as a 54mm set...without the Amerindians they could be sold as Conq....you know (I'm not risking that without spell-check!)
H
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