The
Hawaiian Project
Having
just returned from a couple of weeks in the sunny Hawaiian Isles, I
thought it would be a great time to discuss my ancient Hawaiian and
other Pacific island armies.
A
few years ago, I ran a Hawaiian themed event at Enfilade that I
called Trouble in Paradise using DBA in 15mm. The inspiration came
from Paul Hannah’s very cool Hawaiian DBA army. I found some
excellent sources on the web as well as some great photos depicting
the colorful Hawaiian feathered capes and helmets. Early photos of
tribes in New Guinea were also great helps. Some resources I used
are:
The
Battle of Nu’Uanu 1795 by Dukas (2010) – not entirely ‘ancient’
as firearms were used
Ancient
Hawai’i by Kane (1997)
Dress and Weapons of the
Melanesians at
Warrior
Arts and Weapons of Ancient Hawaii by Campbell (2006)
Melanesian
Warfare by Haddon (1891) –
available on the web
Easter
Island by Thompson (1891) –
available on the web
HEN
Material Culture – Warfare (1930)
I
settled on a hypothetical and not entirely historical Easter Island
scenario.
“
It
is 1422AD and trouble is brewing on Easter Island. Competition is
fierce over natural resources for the construction of the great moai
and strangers have appeared on the shores to complicate matters.
The
following lists are eligible for the tournament:
IV/12a
Polynesian
IV/12b
Melanesian
IV/12c
Hawaiian
IV/12d
Maori
IV/11
Chinook
IV/37b
Molouccan
IV/70
Chanka
IV/71
Chimu
IV/81
Incan
IV/73
Ming Chinese (except no Cv or LH allowed - they had to eat the horses
to get that far - and no Art allowed – the cannons were tossed
overboard in a typhoon - replace Cv with 4Bd and LH with 3Bd or 2Ps,
and replace Art with 3Ax or 7Hd).
Trophies
for the top finishers. NICT qualifiers with 8 players. Some loaner
armies available.”
So
now I had to paint up the ‘loaner armies.’ I also wanted to be
able to field a Hawaiian army for Warrior and/or FOG i.e. about 220
total figures.
After
searching on the web for suppliers, I found four sources:
-
-
-
-
I
decided to start with the Pacific islands crowd and do the others
later (much later – still working on them!). Here is a rundown of
the figures I needed:
DBA
2.2 LISTS – FIGURE NEEDS
IV-12a Polynesian 30 3Bd 1
general
IV-12a Polynesian 4 2Ps
IV-12b Melanesian 30 3Sp 1
general
IV-12b Melanesian 4 2Ps
IV-12c Hawaiian 30 3Bd 1
general
IV-12c Hawaiian 8 4P
IV-12c Hawaiian 6 2Ps
IV-12d Maori 36 3Bd 1
general
IV-37b Moluccan 27 3Wb 1
general
IV-37b Moluccan 6 3Bw
IV-37b Moluccan 2 2Ps
DBA
TOTAL 183
I
decided to build 2 armies of each (although I ended up not building a
Maori army which is another ongoing project) and I also wanted to
have that Warrior army (220 figures). For the Polynesians,
Melanesians and Hawaiians I used
Bloodaxe Hawaiians – their
‘Mega-mix’ is great with 67 figures for $14 plus
shipping. For
the Molouccans I used Bloodaxe Moros (from their Moro rebellion
line). I built one Hawaiian DBA army using Eureka figures. I did not
get around to building armies for the others, although I am still
working on the Maoris. I ended up ordering 590 Bloodaxe figures at a
cost of $140 and 47 Eureka figures costing $62 (!! - the shipping
cost more than the figures!!). I was very happy with Bloodaxe and
have ordered several other of their lines.
Note
also that my list was for DBA 2.2 – the DBA 3 lists are
substantially different and will require rebasing many figures mostly
from 3Bd to 4Bd (which also makes them incompatible with the Warrior
list of all LMI = light medium infantry = 3 figures per base – I
hate Phil Barker).
Next
came researching painting schemes. Here is where the web came in
quite handy – tons of pictures on Pinterest. The nobles wore
feather capes, some quite colorful (Hawaiians in particular) and
carried feather standards. Priests (kahunas) accompanied warriors
into battle carrying idols covered in colorful feathers. The warriors
themselves wore a bark cloth (kapa) kilt or loincloth.
Most
of the troops classed as ‘blade’ used clubs although some nobles
used a wooden paddle-shaped club embedded with sharks teeth or
obsidian. Javelins and slings were used, but not bows (except for the
Moluccans). Shields did not seem to be used. The kahuna priest
holding the idol aloft is an interesting camp follower and the
Bloodaxe mix included a couple.
So
once I had the figures, I began by cleaning off the flash (which is
not much on Bloodaxe, a bit more on Eureka), washing them with water
and plain dish soap to remove any mold residue and then gluing them 3
or 4 to a Popsicle stick with plain white school glue. I’ll put all
of the same pose figure on a stick to facilitate rapid painting.
Since
most of the dudes are mostly naked, I spray painted them a medium
dark tan which would be both a base coat and the final skin tone. I
use plain old Rustoleum spray paint for metal figures.
Then
I went through the entire lot with single colors – I use el cheapo
acrylics from the craft store. Black for the hair, yellow-red-black
for the capes and helmets, off white for the kahuna and for loin
cloths, a darker brown for spears/pikes. Once the painting is
complete I brush on a wash of Minwax dark walnut wood stain that is
thinned down with standard thinner. Once that is dry, I base the
figures using old beer coasters cut to size – I use wood glue mixed
with brown paint and once I have the figures on the base I carefully
slide the lot into a tray of sand. Once dry, I hit them with
Dullcote. I’ve tried different matte spray finishes, but always
come back to Dullcote. Here in the great Northwest, if you try to use
a clear spray finish in the winter when the humidity is 100% you will
end up with a bit of shine no matter what you do – it picks up
moisture from the air and that gets absorbed by the spray resulting
in the shine. I’ve even tried spraying then immediately putting the
figures in the freezer (where the humidity is supposed to be by
definition zero) and that hasn’t worked for me. So I usually wait
until August during the dry season and spray all the figures I’ve
painted in the past year...
Here
are a load of Melanesians – mostly spear.