How It's Made: Toy Soldiers

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  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 181

  • @Ember-vw2ms
    @Ember-vw2ms 3 роки тому +129

    They treat it like adults playing with toys is some foreign concept that's impossible to wrap your head around.

    • @peanutant11
      @peanutant11 Рік тому +9

      adult toys

    • @Ember-vw2ms
      @Ember-vw2ms Рік тому +26

      Okay well don't say it like that@@peanutant11

    • @didelphidae5228
      @didelphidae5228 Рік тому +16

      Adults just made up a bunch of rules and called it "wargames" lol

    • @thomaswaters4963
      @thomaswaters4963 Рік тому +19

      Your only as young as you feel!There really is no age limit on toys or games.Who cares if you still enjoy playing war games with toy soldiers and armored vehicles.Its a hobby and everybody should have some kind of hobby to have something to do in their spare time.Boys and their toys.They only get more expensive as the years go on!

    • @peanutant11
      @peanutant11 Рік тому +6

      @@Ember-vw2ms OH I JUST REALIZED WHAT I SAID

  • @galleos4663
    @galleos4663 3 роки тому +66

    I like how they explained each toy soldier category, many times people that don't know about this hobby tends to lump everyone together, IMHO.

  • @ronaldmcdonald8303
    @ronaldmcdonald8303 2 роки тому +18

    Yeah I know, I'm 33 and still love collecting and playing with soldiers! Their just my thing, some people smoke, I play army men, is that so wrong?

  • @princeaugustcasting
    @princeaugustcasting 3 роки тому +54

    Prince August offers toy soldier rubber moulds that allow people to cast metal toy soldiers in 25mm, 28mm, 32mm, 40mm and 54mm. We are introducing a tin bismuth alloy as a low temperature alternative to pewter. Our moulds are designed to easily be used at home with just a hotplate or electric cooker to heat the metal. Based in Ireland 45 years this year.

    • @jacksonmcdaniel3250
      @jacksonmcdaniel3250 3 роки тому +1

      I like watching your casting videos thank you for uploading them

    • @theBaron0530
      @theBaron0530 3 роки тому

      Second that! I've got the Seven Years War 54mm molds, and the 40mm 18th century wargame molds. It's fun to cast and paint your own.

    • @kylejohnson423
      @kylejohnson423 3 роки тому

      Dunken miniatures (your U.S. distributor) hasn't updated their store in awhile (Particularly in the fantasy moulds section) is there some type of issue?

    • @princeaugustcasting
      @princeaugustcasting 3 роки тому

      @@kylejohnson423 Not that I am aware of. This type of question should be emailed to us.

    • @kylejohnson423
      @kylejohnson423 3 роки тому

      @@princeaugustcasting Thank you for the response. May I have a link to this email?

  • @coleparker
    @coleparker 3 роки тому +23

    I love dioramas. They are like 3D paintings.

  • @justdraw316
    @justdraw316 3 роки тому +16

    18:47 Weathering basically means to make something look like it's been through alot of weather, say wind, rain, snow etc. BAsically it needs to look messy rather than uniformed and pristine

    • @theBaron0530
      @theBaron0530 3 роки тому +4

      Yeah, I found it a little odd that whoever wrote the text hadn't researched the term. It's not like it's some cryptic term. A quick websearch would have turned it up.

  • @c.coleman2979
    @c.coleman2979 Рік тому +32

    Interesting video. Obviously, a manufacturer in eastern Europe and the exact process the artist used was for what they call "flats", but fully round military miniatures also seem to have been made by this same plant. They didn't explain it, but the old method was a lead/tin allow. Tin isn't a problem but because lead is toxic, that particular alloy is no longer used. While fine models can be made from plastic, metal miniatures are still regarded more highly than more modern materials. With 3D printing and CAD programs, very detailed plastic figurines are possible and can be sold as a software program to those with suitable 3D machines.

    • @koganinja100
      @koganinja100 Рік тому

      I believe in Russia, good video.
      Some the best soldiers made in Russia. Even in plastic check out Zvezda - awesome models and figures.
      All the best from down under
      Lewis
      Sydney
      Australia 🇦🇺

  • @gordonenquist36
    @gordonenquist36 3 роки тому +34

    Should have mentioned W.Britains hollow cast figures and how the 1:32 or 54 mm scale became a standard for many years.

  • @theBaron0530
    @theBaron0530 3 роки тому +23

    Focused very heavily on toy soldiers and miniature figures from Russia. It is accurate, though, to talk about the beautiful miniatures the Russian studios produce today. From the quality of the castings, to the quality of the painting, they represent some of the best miniature figures in the world.

  • @theicecavalier342
    @theicecavalier342 Рік тому +3

    I remember 50 years ago using pewter figures. Painting was a real joy for me. I'll have to find that box in the garage..

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 Рік тому +1

    Ok…as a veteran of casting lead soldiers myself, these soldiers are neat and safer. I find it interesting that iron is used. Great, fun video which brought back good memories (safety issues aside). There is nothing like creating your own soldiers, including casting, cleanup and painting. Thanks.

  • @chriscoulter6089
    @chriscoulter6089 3 роки тому +8

    Warhammer is just as addictive as any drug, but MUCH more expensive!

  • @ChernobylPone
    @ChernobylPone Рік тому +5

    I had WW2 toys soldier that where made from metal or ceramic, very detailed and pricey. But my parents threw all my military toys in the trash or gave them away.

  • @mr.bozobozo5504
    @mr.bozobozo5504 11 місяців тому +1

    "why do adults play with toys?" that had me laughing.

  • @fishgazoo5851
    @fishgazoo5851 3 роки тому +14

    A very nice collection. Thank you for the information!

  • @vargaresa
    @vargaresa Рік тому +4

    I wonder how this factory still stays in business, since the quality of tabletop figures improved so much in the last twenty years and nobody uses metal minis anymore.

    • @Tippet76
      @Tippet76 Рік тому +1

      I'd say that it probably comes down to a few things.
      1. People trying to impress their buddies with the best, just like buying a expensive rims for a car, pointless but cool to a niche following
      2. Business men and retired officers and military contractors that again want the best.
      3. I think they are in Russia so the cost of living is quite a bit lower than say America or western europe. Also the market over there for these sorts of items might be different like the narrator was saying the Soviet union pushed these types of toys pretty hard.

    • @dennishorror142
      @dennishorror142 Рік тому

      Collectors. My Granddad made them Per Hand in Germany and makes a hell of cash with it.

  • @loszhor
    @loszhor 3 роки тому +11

    Nice but the music is too loud in some spots.

    • @yobubo
      @yobubo 3 роки тому +1

      like, through the whole damn video

  • @abbacadabra6530
    @abbacadabra6530 3 роки тому +3

    miniature toy soldiers doc narrated by the same guy who just did a speznatz hostage rescue doc. Same music team also.

  • @JaceDanielFilms
    @JaceDanielFilms 2 роки тому +2

    who else is up at 3pm watching random videos on how things are made?

    • @VitaKet
      @VitaKet 9 місяців тому

      Who isn't up at 3pm? You mean 3am?

  • @nigelcarren
    @nigelcarren 3 роки тому +13

    I make fully-articulated steel armour for clients all over the world. Many times we have debated when is a miniature considered a 'toy' we all agreed it is the articulation, or should I say the lack of it.
    A 'Toy' merely looks like a suit of armour, but a fully articulated Miniature IS a suit of armour!
    Interestingly my tax classification from my French workshops confirm this, as I wish I could be classed as a toy-maker because I would pay less tax, but what I make, be that 1/2, 1/6 or even 1/12th scale is all taxed as 'Military hardware'... Unfortunately!
    Fascinating video thanks. Best wishes from an Englishman in a French forest... and of course all the mice! 🇬🇧🧐🐭🐭🐭🐭🐭⚒️

  • @wheresstrelok2187
    @wheresstrelok2187 3 роки тому +12

    I'm pretty sure the voice is an AI from the way he speaks

  • @АндрейШмырев-ж3з

    Фантастическая колекция!❤

  • @wojciechkoska3515
    @wojciechkoska3515 Рік тому

    16:05. Weathering as mentioned here is not as much groundwork base, which is more falling into creating a mini diorama, as it is showing effects of weather, as well as a light and shadow effect on the object. Without it it would look just like a...toy. I believe this is more like a historical miniature. Scale model. 👍

  • @aricliljegren890
    @aricliljegren890 3 роки тому +6

    Strange that they talk about toy soldiers for kids and show historicals, then move on to the high-end military figures and show historicals - but when they get to wargaming (which originated with historicals) they just focus on Warhammer fantasy and 40k (did Warhammer fund this film?) If they would have talked about the thousands and rule sets, hundreds of dedicated Websites, UA-cam channels, and blogs, along with the dozens of magazines and miniature companies wholly dedicated to the historical wargaming industry, this could have been a fully fleshed out documentary on the subject. This gloss-over treatment given to wargaming (focusing on a single game company) is akin to creating a documentary on the history of fine art painters and then only talking about Andy Warhol.

    • @Mechabang
      @Mechabang 3 роки тому

      I think they just look up what's the most popular franchise and it "Warhammer" was the first on the page. They were trying to wrap it, it feels.

    • @aricliljegren890
      @aricliljegren890 3 роки тому +1

      @@Mechabang Agreed - and the result wasn't so much a documentary as it was an infomercial. Sad really.

  • @davidkarvay6444
    @davidkarvay6444 Рік тому

    Super majstrovské dielo!!!❤😊

  • @mosads2986
    @mosads2986 2 роки тому +2

    UNBELIEVABLE UNBELIEVABLE UNBELIEVABLE 👏 IT IS A WORLD BY IT'S SELF

  • @2d6wargaming13
    @2d6wargaming13 Рік тому

    2:53 nice of the mould to cut its own runners, gates and vents.

  • @PeterPan54167
    @PeterPan54167 3 роки тому +3

    What’s the company that’s make the metal toy soldiers ?

    • @Number1tnfan683
      @Number1tnfan683 3 роки тому +1

      Multiple companies make them.

    • @PeterPan54167
      @PeterPan54167 3 роки тому +3

      @@Number1tnfan683 Yes but who is the guy in the video. ? Do they have a website ? Do you know any website where I can buy some of these . Not being smart I just want to know it would be cool to have some .

  • @Emdee5632
    @Emdee5632 Рік тому

    I only ever had the classic plastic toy soldiers made by Airfix (and Matchbox). The somewhat softer plastic, not the brittle hard plastic Airfix /Hornby is using now.

    • @jeffreese1828
      @jeffreese1828 Рік тому +1

      At the time those were first made they were the best sculpted figures at the time , and they still hold high rank today , imo . Especially those Airfix WWII guys .... I mean , whoever molded all those wrinkles and creases into those uniforms was a wizard .
      Sure , sculpting and mold making are harder the more detail is present , but the realism was worth it . Any of their WWII sets were awesome , and I still have mine . Particularly nice , imo , were British 8th Army and Afrika Corps soldiers . But , it is hard to pick favorites , but the Australians and Japanese are just Excellent ! Well , they all were great .... their Wermacht Germans are like the Gold Standard for Germans .Each set had distinctive Officer figure , which were awesome . I like the plastic figs better than metal ones , hands down , with traditional style being only cool from historical view , imo . Static poses and gloss paint jobs aren't my cup of tea , however , the best metal figs in recent decades like W.Britains , Conte are fantastic , but too expensive to be played with, and too fragile , and too heavy... but for diorama or display , hard to beat . Cheers !

    • @gabrielnguyen5580
      @gabrielnguyen5580 Рік тому

      feels like 1/72 fell by the wayside in general :(

  • @someimperialfist1404
    @someimperialfist1404 3 роки тому +1

    Hay, this was a interesting video. I love it

  • @stevetaylor6714
    @stevetaylor6714 Рік тому +2

    Sacrilige! I wargamed with a French and then a Russian Napoleonic army. My model soldiers ( not toys ) were made by a Southampton firm who are no longer there called Miniature Figurines, we used rules for battles so it was a serious affair. I have plastic but nothing can replace the metal soldiers

  • @AC-mw3tz
    @AC-mw3tz Рік тому +1

    In western Europe and North America, this hobby and industry is much more advanced.

  • @fred.sherwood2575
    @fred.sherwood2575 Рік тому

    It is really interesting. I could enjoy it even more if you turned the Music down or better still OFF.
    Can understand what you are saying ???

  • @carausiuscaesar5672
    @carausiuscaesar5672 3 роки тому +2

    Love toy soldiers!

  • @Capetan-burazer
    @Capetan-burazer 11 місяців тому

    this is cool soldier

  • @jboydayz
    @jboydayz Рік тому +1

    These people are our heroes

  • @peterpinto6513
    @peterpinto6513 4 роки тому +5

    Im sure the resin figures this presenter pointed out were actually composition figures

    • @gordonenquist36
      @gordonenquist36 3 роки тому +2

      I believe Lineol was the company or the material, compressed sawdust with some kind of binder trapping a wire armature. Lightweight figures, fully round and paint detailed, but could decompose in humid/wet conditions.

  • @germanarevaloaraya2593
    @germanarevaloaraya2593 Рік тому +1

    Hola. Gracias por mostrar este arte.

  • @Chapai17
    @Chapai17 Рік тому

    сколько советских солдатиков
    так приятно)

  • @ducomaritiem7160
    @ducomaritiem7160 3 роки тому +2

    I'm not aware of a casting material consisting of Tin, cast iron and bismuth...???

  • @ИгорьДобрынин-ч3р

    Потрясающее видео!!

  • @anthonytv1952
    @anthonytv1952 Рік тому

    BEST JOB EVER !

  • @rwdyeriii
    @rwdyeriii 2 роки тому +3

    A very interesting video. Interesting to have an American narrating for a Russian produced film.

  • @ryry8210
    @ryry8210 Рік тому

    4:28 The worker needs a respirator or some better ventilation in his work area. That metal dust is not good for the lungs 😩

  • @bootzflies
    @bootzflies Рік тому

    I love toy soldiers and figurines old and new

  • @andrelaplechade608
    @andrelaplechade608 2 роки тому

    Fantastic!!

  • @TheRustAdmin
    @TheRustAdmin 3 роки тому +7

    Very strange emphases, stresses and pauses in the narration.

  • @GothicMod
    @GothicMod 3 роки тому +3

    Could have been worthwhile, hadn't it been given the 'dumbed-down' delivery, more suitable to low-attention-span people with the brains of peas.

  • @ralphwiggums9831
    @ralphwiggums9831 3 роки тому +2

    I love toy soldiers

  • @petitsoldat1497
    @petitsoldat1497 3 роки тому +3

    Bonjour trés intéressant , je suis fan des figurines au 1/32 merci pour cette vidéo

  • @thatwargaming5459
    @thatwargaming5459 Рік тому

    Can we have link to buy

  • @thatwargaming5459
    @thatwargaming5459 Рік тому

    Umm actually their are some companies in NA who make them 12:26

  • @ismaelhall3990
    @ismaelhall3990 Рік тому

    so much work

  • @lonewolf6364
    @lonewolf6364 3 роки тому

    4:30 onwards for about 30 seconds, narrator kills me with the way talks!

    • @guster489
      @guster489 3 роки тому

      He is reading individual words instead of entire sentences and it fucking hurts to listen to

  • @aldwinflores7029
    @aldwinflores7029 Рік тому

    Those thousands of soldiers are no match with my single spacemarine cast. Fight me.

  • @MiniatureMashUp
    @MiniatureMashUp Рік тому

    The toy soldier paintjobs are a crime. They obscure the beautiful detail of the figure beneath under globs of glossy paint.

  • @jamiehughes5573
    @jamiehughes5573 Рік тому +1

    The OG miniature for wargames before Warhammer

  • @MarinaDeMéxico-m6f
    @MarinaDeMéxico-m6f Рік тому

    Gracias por esto¡ Hoy señores y aún seguimos siendo niños jugando grandes batallas en la mesa de la cena😂

  • @Stranger-gl6ie
    @Stranger-gl6ie Рік тому

    Where can i buy one for a good price in europe?

  • @milkcastein
    @milkcastein Рік тому

    Seeing this remembers me to the mel gibson's movie 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @omerthe3rd1
    @omerthe3rd1 Рік тому

    It seems they use lead for these toys ...as I have few if them ...they are heavy and soft enough to bend the thin parts .. Problem. Is lead is not a safe metal to play around or to handle on regular basis .. May be good for display only .. By the way superb video

  • @DaLavenderhillMob
    @DaLavenderhillMob Рік тому +3

    I cant handle the Narrator hes like someone off Rick and Mortys International cable
    I can't take him seriously.
    Shame as interested in making mould for sculpture

  • @ДмитрийЯкушев-з7э
    @ДмитрийЯкушев-з7э 9 місяців тому

    Есть ещё один интересный фильм посвящённый солдатикам. Это Армия покорившая время

  • @StephenLyons-tl8ie
    @StephenLyons-tl8ie Рік тому +1

    Why ..... is...the narration....so....halting...in parts?

  • @theskullkid421
    @theskullkid421 Рік тому +1

    It sounds to me like this documentary was translated into english from a russian original...is that possible?

  • @wolfganggerwatowski8628
    @wolfganggerwatowski8628 3 роки тому

    Sehr schön gemacht ich habe auch eine kleine Sammlung

  • @PAEGGames
    @PAEGGames Рік тому

    Крутая карта на стене

  • @theBaron0530
    @theBaron0530 3 роки тому +2

    @0:53 "And why are they no longer made of tin?" That's false. Many figures are still cast in white metal alloys, which contain about 70% tin, mixed with metals like antimony or bismuth. Some are still cast with alloys that contain lead (and you won't die from having them). Others are cast in resin, especially miniatures sold as kits, to be painted to a high level of detail. And some are molded in plastic, from the green army men we played with in the 60s and 70s, to the collectors playsets sold today.
    Again @3:18 the narrator says that today, toy soldiers are made almost exclusively of plastic. That is simply not true.
    I get the impression that this was written by someone who had no knowledge of the hobby, like a Science intern.
    And again, @4:02 casting in "tin" did not "end over a hundred years ago". The biggest change was the elimination of alloys containing lead in the mid- to late 60s, at least in the West, and due to consumer protection laws.
    @4:55 the method they show here produces a figure that would be called half-round. Despite the narration, this is not the "only way" to make a figure, or to make the master, to be more specific. For fully-round figures, it's still common for an artist to sculpt the master figure from a medium, like epoxy putty, or clay, and then the mold is made from this master figure.
    Flat figures, which originated in Germany and are still very popular there more than anywhere else, were engraved into either half of a slate mold. The Germans call those "Zinnfiguren", "tin figures", and the alloys used to cast those did have a higher percentage of tin, generally, than the alloys used to cast fully-round figures.
    And of course, 3D sculpting and printing are used more frequently today, to make a master, and also, to make a finished figure.
    @6:06 I don't know of any manufacturer who uses iron to cast figures today. In the 30s and 40s, there was an American company, Grey Iron, who cast toy soldiers, along with household items, and other toys. They used molds made of sand, which were called forms. The two halves of the mold were filled with wet casting sand, the master was pressed in, and then the molten iron was poured in. Their toy soldiers were simple, but popular in their time. The company is still in business, but doesn't make the figures anymore. Ironically, when the show gets around to discussing cast iron toy soldiers, the images are of hollowcast white metal toy soldiers.
    @10:06 when the narrator describes the "Nuremberg" standard, he's referring to flats, the German Zinnfiguren, not to fully round toy soldiers. And it was established at least a generation or more before, in the second half of the 18th century. Tinsmiths began producing replicas of contemporary figures, like Frederick the Great and his army. The scales or sizes that became common for fully round figures were established towards the end of the 19th century. William Britain helped drive this development, when he made his figures of a size to match popular toy trains in the UK. His early figures were around 40mm, but soon he made them around 54mm, and that became the popular size, which persists to today, though 60mm has become popular for brands like King & Country, and other makers of collector's toy soldiers.

    • @ryanbarker5217
      @ryanbarker5217 2 роки тому

      i don't put too much faith in the accuracy of these kinds of shows, they more often than not are rife with half-understood and poorly researched 'facts.' without fail there's always someone in the comments section who actually knows what they're talking about and not just someone assigned to write an episode of something they have little interest in and little time to do it properly.

  • @Mandalore_the_Ok
    @Mandalore_the_Ok Рік тому

    Where can I find the original video that is in Russian?

  • @spades-1355
    @spades-1355 Рік тому +1

    Toy soldiers were warhammer before it was cool

  • @dunning234
    @dunning234 Рік тому

    Only a artist can do this thanks.

  • @marklestergamayon4082
    @marklestergamayon4082 Рік тому

    So cool if you have the tools and own business and money and knowledge and God you have everything

  • @gordonfreeman5036
    @gordonfreeman5036 3 роки тому +9

    AAAAAAAAAA!!! Jesus! It's like the narrator went to the James Tiberius Kick school of voice acting. The documentary is almost unwatchable as the narrator emphases the wrong syllables and pauses in the middle of sentences. I think my ears are bleeding.

    • @therealbrushguy
      @therealbrushguy 3 роки тому +1

      And all the time he sounds, as if he needs to shout over the way to loud and annoying music.

    • @lonewolf6364
      @lonewolf6364 3 роки тому +1

      Thank god, I just said the same thing!

  • @Klokkeklar
    @Klokkeklar 3 роки тому +3

    This is not a kids hobby. I sold a kidney to afford it.

  • @leeedsonetwo
    @leeedsonetwo Рік тому

    Is this really how anyone makes toys like this.

    • @Emdee5632
      @Emdee5632 Рік тому

      Most toy soldiers are made in plastic and that has been the case for many decades now.

  • @Bonehead_Gaming2007
    @Bonehead_Gaming2007 Рік тому +1

    The narrator constantly sounds like he's out of breath after every sentence

  • @nathangaoiran5082
    @nathangaoiran5082 Рік тому +1

    hey if toy soldiers was metal and painted but why the plastic toy soldiers are not painted?

    • @Emdee5632
      @Emdee5632 Рік тому

      I have no idea but I guess since metal figurines are more expensive to make you might just as well handpaint them and then sell them. Plastic toy soldiers are mass produced, if you are lucky the colour resembles the colour of the real uniforms.

  • @ridleyhatessamuscgtfbjjh4010

    I play with the plastic ones

  • @manuel17051968
    @manuel17051968 2 роки тому

    Genial las figuras

  • @KrissandraC
    @KrissandraC Рік тому

    Can I have the clay ones for free? 😊

  • @barbarianlife
    @barbarianlife Рік тому +1

    This is how Games Workshop / Citadel used to make metal minis except the standard of miniature sculpture was and is far higher.

  • @stanleyblanc6297
    @stanleyblanc6297 3 роки тому

    I thought tin soldiers were made until the 1940s. Am I wrong? Lead soldiers were made till the 1960s I think.

  • @ryanbarker5217
    @ryanbarker5217 2 роки тому +1

    the narrator's cadence is weird and off-putting. it's like, okay, shatner, just speak without the pauses, yeah? good video aside from that, though. i get that the original show was in russian, but is this some bad AI voice?

  • @Syst_32
    @Syst_32 Рік тому

    I was waiting to see Warhammer 40K here, to be honest

  • @Theonewhoforgotlife
    @Theonewhoforgotlife Рік тому

    my childhood

  • @iliterallydontknowwhattona2288
    @iliterallydontknowwhattona2288 3 роки тому

    I'm interested, where can I find things like these "games"?

    • @rwdyeriii
      @rwdyeriii 2 роки тому

      In the US you can usually find games like this in comic book shops and hobby shops. Not sure about the rest of the world.

  • @LEESS1005
    @LEESS1005 Рік тому

    When I was growing up,I played with 2 dimensional card soldiers,

    • @tdoychev720
      @tdoychev720 Рік тому

      What were they? I think i had some too but cannot remember what they were called

    • @LEESS1005
      @LEESS1005 Рік тому

      @@tdoychev720 to be honest,I don’t remember,it was 50 years ago,they were my late fathers,they dated back to pre WWII,(1938/39),they were Waterloo French and English soldiers.his dad,my paternal grandfather had got them for him,he handed them down to me,and one of his last wishes was to be cremated with his ‘toy soldiers’,so I laid the English army on his left side and the French army on his right.

    • @tdoychev720
      @tdoychev720 Рік тому +1

      @@LEESS1005 I see. Very touching story. Thanks for sharing with me

    • @LEESS1005
      @LEESS1005 Рік тому

      @@tdoychev720 Thank you for this video,it has brought back some bitter sweet memories for me,I have now start a 15mm warlord games Napoleonic army,both French and British to hand down to my grandson when he is older,

  • @jrd33
    @jrd33 3 роки тому +8

    Sorry, unwatchable due to loud, intrusive music and over-emoted narration. A pity.

    • @vincentho3964
      @vincentho3964 3 роки тому +2

      But very informative. I just lower the volume and up the speed when needed. Thanks.

    • @Daniel-sk7wr
      @Daniel-sk7wr 2 місяці тому

      Youre being dramatic, the video is fine for a russian translation

  • @HO-bndk
    @HO-bndk 3 роки тому +8

    Does. The narrator. Have. A. SPEECH. Impediment? I made model figures for nearly 30 years (until 3D scanning and 3D printing came along and ruined the hobby). I've never even once heard any referred to as "Wartime miniatures". I think they must mean "military miniatures"

    • @JPGotrokkits
      @JPGotrokkits Рік тому

      I think this was originally a Russian program, the script has all sorts of problems, not to mention a lousy narrator. The delivery is choppy, overly dramatic, and just amateurish in ways that are obvious to anyone that has done presentation.

  • @lastoriainminiatura7032
    @lastoriainminiatura7032 7 місяців тому

    Perfect video ...russian masters

  • @ИванСмирнов-й8н5ш

    А можно оригинал на русском языке?

  • @allentate3760
    @allentate3760 Рік тому

    Your background music is too loud, annoying, and unnecessary. I’m not watching this

  • @historicalsignificance4183
    @historicalsignificance4183 3 роки тому +5

    I love toy soldiers. But the whole business is a scam. You need to spend hundreds of dollars to even get started because kits are expensive,but the paint is twice as expensive. Brands and games like Warhammer are an excellent example of what I'm referring to. If the kits and paints were sold for cheaper, I believe that more people would get into this hobby

    • @ipodhty
      @ipodhty 3 роки тому +2

      There are many different brands for cheaper then games workshops. Lot of military figures can be gotten cheep

    • @rwdyeriii
      @rwdyeriii 2 роки тому

      Historical Gaming is much cheaper than Warhammer. Also you can 3D print your own miniatures or if you want there are ways to make your own molds and cast your own miniatures. On top of that, the cheapest way to get into the hobby is through the use of paper models and paper soldiers. There are thousands of paper models available and several websites devoted to this hobby as well as several sites that are devoted to paper soldiers that you can print out from PDF files on your home computer printer.

  • @moogiibat5845
    @moogiibat5845 Рік тому +1

    Reporter looks like Navalny only bit chubbier.

  • @Ray-h7x8e
    @Ray-h7x8e Рік тому

    Aluminum

  • @TheDaltonius
    @TheDaltonius 3 роки тому

    Star Wars armada boiii

  • @whiskypops
    @whiskypops Рік тому

    Then 3D printing came

  • @wolfshade3773
    @wolfshade3773 Рік тому

    🥰

  • @SkankHunt42isback
    @SkankHunt42isback 17 днів тому

    fire your sound guy

  • @kingdevin66
    @kingdevin66 Рік тому

    Make home soldier toy