"Just good enough" described my skill in painting horses a year ago. Back then, I'd put off painting cavalry because I didn't enjoy painting the horses. Maybe it was the musculature, maybe it was the reins and tethers or maybe it was the horse at the stable that bit me. Whatever it was, I struggled when I got to these figures. If you're going to paint ancients, there's no way around the fact that you're going to paint horses over and over again. By the time I painted my Turkish army, I'd painted so many of horses that I'd forgotten I didn't like them. I'd reached the point where horses were no longer a mystery to me. I knew I'd conquered my Equinophobia when the first figures I painted in my Hungarian army were 72 figures of cavalry.
My current painting phobia is freehanding shields. When I see a shield, my first reaction is to look for a shield transfer. Or slap a geometric shape down and call it good. I might do a little drybrushing or a wash but I've never painted an object on a shield. This is a problem in my Medieval Hungarian army because the Cliperati and Armati battlegroups have 64 shields and the 50+ knights each have a shield ...ugh!
For this project, I made a rule that even if I wasn't happy with the results, I'd move on. There were 64 shields and I couldn't sweat over each one. I turned to the Internet for inspiration and found excellent Hungarian heraldry sites here and here. I loved the picture below so I decided to give it a try.
I stripped out the fancy bits and concentrated on the motif of an eagle's head rising out of a crown. It took a while but I achieved passable results. I reminded myself that these shields will be bunched up in units of 32 and then viewed from 3 feet or more. The camera is quite unforgiving this close up but here it goes...
Geese figure prominently in Hungarian heraldry so I gave them a try. As it turns out, painting geese was the easiest of the many items I tried. It starts with the S and then you fatten out the bottom of the letter. If only every item I painted could be shaped via the letters of the alphabet, my shields would be so much the better!