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Monday, January 4, 2016

2015 in Review

I have been inspired by a number of other blogs to review the year that was.  I particularly like the ideas as it will be a nice reminder for me of what I did during the year to look back on.

So how did the Lead Mountain survive the year.......


This post will be about what I got up to during the year from a hobby perspective.  I will follow it with another one in a few days on the plans for the coming year.

Games


While I get great enjoyment from painting and modelling, at the end of the day it is when we put the armies out on the table that it all comes to life.

I have been very lucky over the past few years to meet a great group of gentlemen (well almost all are) through the Goulburn Valiant Stormers.  This has led me into many new fields - I knew nothing of ancients until two years ago as an example.  It has also led me to the wonderful Impetus rules when I was first introduced to them by Richard and Ralph.

So gaming this year has largely centred around the club where we have played a number of Impetus games - I am particularly taken by this photo that was taken so wonderfully by David H.  It shows various units from my Italian Wars collection on the attack.


We also competed in three Impetus comps - Cancon, Wintercon and MOAB.  Each of these run over a weekend and the fun of the table is almost exceeded by the laughs over lunch and dinner.

I was also lucky enough to play with Ralph's large and wonderful collection of 15mm Thirty Years War as a playtest for the new Baroque rule set that is coming early this year.  We are really looking forward to it.


There have also been a few games of 20mm WWII using RapidFire - especially the Golden Monty weekend organised by Chris K.

Inventory


During the year I have walked down a path that some would say can only lead to madness. 

I spent a considerable amount of time creating an inventory of all my unpainted lead, plastic and resin. 

Many of you will say I am mad and what a waste of time - but it has already saved my a few hundred dollars where I was about to pounce on a sale but chose to check the inventory first to discover that I already had the items about to be purchased.

So what follows are two graphs showing the percentages of my unpainted pile by period - one based on actual figures regardless of scale and one based on an adjusted count of 'painting points'.  For this purpose I am using the point system from the Analogue Hobbies Paint site.

 
 
The WWII will probably always be the core of my collections and effort.  But the Ancients, Renaissance and SYW are collections that I have started over the past three years.

When I said that I had inventoried all of my unpainted stock I meant almost all of it - noticeable absences are my 6mm and 28mm Napoleonic projects and some 1/1200 and 1/2400th scale naval projects.

I'm sure the more astute among you will have noticed that I have shown percentages and not actual numbers of figures - let's just say there are lots.

Painting


In addition to the inventory, I have started to record what I have painted by year.  My inspiration for this came directly from the six monthly reviews that I look forward to reading on Jonathan's wonderful Palouse Wargaming Journal.  I have to say that in this regard I have unashamedly copied the style / content of his graphs.

I have been painting figures since 1980 in a serious fashion - not counting the various Airfix ones done prior to that.  My first projects were Modern and WWII 1/300 micro armour which moved onto the wonderful 6mm / 8mm Adler Napoleonics.  While I have all these painted units and occasionally get them out - I have no record of when I painted what. 

As a consequence, my records largely follow this blog and the records that were kept through my participation in the regular painting challenges on The Guild forum - but unfortunately they only start in 2010.

The first graph shows painting by year by period based on an actual figure count. 

 
While the next graph shows the actual figures adjusted using the Analogue points.

You can see the predominance of 20mm WWII in the first few years with some more variety coming through in later years.

But perhaps the biggest shock was the variation in output across the years.  2013 was the year that I stripped out my painting room and proceeded to renovate / remodel it and build my stylish bookcases to hold my large collection of military history books.  This consumed much time and the room was not usable for 3-4 months as I was doing it all around work and family time.  This year reflects a number of things - work and life in general, time taken to prepare the inventory and a general painting malaise that set in around the middle of the year.

The next set of graphs show the same but by figure scale - again in raw figure count as well as adjusted for painting points.

 

Perhaps the most noticeable aspect of these two graphs is the low bang for my bucks that comes through in the 6mm Napoleonics in 2012 - 400 or so painted for a small number of points/ 

So that was the year that was.  I have enjoyed the gaming and friendships that come with it - but have not had a very successful year on the actual painting front.  Always next year as they say.

4 comments:

  1. Well I could not be f***ed doing a graph of my output 2015, suffice to say I think it is less than last year, purchasing was possibly less, the push to do my medieval Scots quite possibly was the only army I really made any real dent in, and disappointed really in my overall effort. And like a report card of old " could do better if he applied himself" rings in my ears for 2015. So off to make a realistic assumption based on pure arse I look forward to 2016!

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  2. Excellent work on the analytics, Richard!

    I notice you cleverly show unpainted lead as percentages of total by period. We can see the relative composition of the lead pile but not absolute numbers. Do you have 500 unpainted figures or 5,000? We may never know!

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    1. Thanks Jonathan, I have wanted to emulate yours for a few years now.

      5000??

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