I have added a Chaos Sorcerer with a 'jump pack' to my Illuminati army. It is a chaos jump pack rather than a steed because he is not a Tzeentch sorcerer. Illuminati are non-aligned/Slaanesh.
I will probably add a familiar in the shape of one of Black Cat's cats, that theygive out at shows to customers. Black cats are so very traditional.
I used to want a sort of flying thingy to stand on. It stemmed from watching "Monkey" as a school boy. Whistling up a cloud to fly around on seemed sooooooooooooooo kool.
ReplyDeleteIs he giving me the finger? Tell him outside the Dog & Duck in five! Cheeky foreign looking tramp...when did 'e last wash that cloke
ReplyDeleteI thought the same thing at first. Have to wonder how many "conversions" that piece has been used for in its time. Nice looking flying, or is that floating, base you've done there.
ReplyDeleteDear zzz
ReplyDeleteWhy does everyone have dreams of flying?
J
Dear maverick
ReplyDeleteNote two fingers (admittedly wrong two). He is giving you the good old British salute (means have sex while travelling).
It is a Fenryll figure and is of a necromancer. He was on a base in which he was raising a skeleton from its grave. I do not think a French designer would realise how that pose would look to Anglo-Saxons.
Dear Kevin, the base is from Foundations of War, and comes with a flyer stand (and a locating hole).
ReplyDeleteI like the flying base and the cat familiar idea. Maybe you chaos up the cat a bit by adding a tasteful tentacle or minor greenstuff element? Army is looking good.
ReplyDeleteDear Pagumb
ReplyDeleteThanks,
J
I thought the french would be the very chaps to understand the Agincourt salute (oh dear another urban myth perpetuated) I did wonder actually if it wasn't even older, ruder and more Norse given that the term for a cleft in a tree where two branches spread has a totally different meaning today
ReplyDeleteDear Shaun
ReplyDeleteApparently the Agincourt explanation for the british salute is a myth.
J