Tuesday 15 September 2015

The terrifying power of the administration


I have always loved the character of the Rogue Trader adventurers range, and I really enjoy looking for suitable non-comms and civilians to populate my collection.
 
I was very much excited when it emerged at BOYL'15 that Foundry had put a set of old unreleased Citadel Rogue Trader figures into production. I immediately snaffled some on the day. If you want to get hold of a set yourself, you need look no further than the Foundry website!
 
My favourite conceptually from the set is the scribe / member of the Adeptus Administratum. If you follow the Eldritch Epistles blog, you'll be aware that the figure is a very close match to one of the illustrations from the Rogue Trader blog.
 
The original slotta casting. Pic from Eldritch Epistles.
 
Unfortunately, the pose on the sculpt is rather oddly disco, with its pointing finger and toe-tapping lead foot. That's not to say you can't make a very nice job of the paint and end up with a good looking figure (see Sho3box and Leadplague). I just wanted to make mine a little less obtrusive:
 
 
 

In order to change the pose from a dominating / commanding one, into something more subservient, I removed the over-muscular left arm and it's sausage finger, and replaced it with a plastic arm from the old Confrontation gangers.
 


I hacked away at the extended left leg, glued the foot to the base in a less extended position, and sculpted a new robe closer to the body.


It's not the best conversion I've ever done, but I think it meets the brief. It also means I can paint up a second and they will be distinct characters rather than pointing clones doing their early morning callisthenics!

A nervous ammo trader is quizzed by the Administratum over an error in his self-assessment tax forms.




16 comments:

  1. Well I think he definitely gains in credibility what he lost in panache ! I can only admit Paul and Myself are a lazy bunch but teh extra effort on th emodel really paid here. the final model is significantly better looking than the original (imho).

    Great Job !

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    1. I just struggled to rationalise the pose with the concept for the model, so the beefy arm had to go. Glad you like the results :)

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  2. Great stuff. Will you paint the second guy as is? Will you be able to resist taking the saw to the beefcake arm a second time?

    The self assessment gag made me laugh. Is there an Adminimunda scenario in the offing?

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    1. I will probably paint up the second guy as the sculptor intended (Bob Naismith?). I figure he can stand behind the other guy, looking alarmed at all the dangerous teetering piles of documents.

      Adminimunda sounds like a blast. I suspect it would mainly involve form filling and very little gaming.

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  3. Looks fab. And Adminimunda would be a great game if you could level up your team in their form filling.

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    1. Skills include "advanced penmanship" and "rapid filing", right? Sounds like a blast :)

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  4. Great conversion that improves the model substantially. If you wanted to differentiate "Mr. Pointy" from this one, you could change his book holding hand for one holding a scroll or a loose sheaf of paper.

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    1. Thanks. I'll keep thinking about whether to adapt adeptus discotrum or keep 'stock'. I quite like contrasting customised with stock models

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  5. Nice work Axiom. I always like seeing RT civilians. I was badly tempted by that pack myself, but then I looked at the lead mountain...

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    1. Yeah...the lead mountain needed feeding ;)

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  6. Nice work, a subtle yet extremely effective conversion

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    1. Thanks! Sometimes conversions cry out to be obvious and eye-catching, sometimes I think it's just enough to change the feel of a figure in a fairly low key way - like this one :)

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  7. Hey there's nothing wrong with disco. :)
    I thought the conversion was well done while the blues and reddish browns you added to the overall grey colour scheme was spot on.

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    1. I like my share of disco, just on weekends ;)

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  8. Your conversion works perfectly, I really like how subtle it is but how much does it change the attitude and the whole mini. Enjoyable work!

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    1. Thanks Suber - I think pose is really important in conveying the tone of a figure - it it's wrong, it seems to detract from the overall look in my view.

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