The hobby projects for 2026 have been dominated by tackling abandoned projects. As previously mentioned, many years ago I purchased 6mm armies for the 1859 Franco Austrian War. I had even managed to paint a battalion of Austrian infantry and an Uhlan regiment.
Putting my 17th century Polish further on the back burner, I found myself painting up my Austrians for 1859. In a week's time I had finished 5 more battalions and of Austrian infantry and beefed up my Uhlan regiment (from 8 figures to 12 figures) to look more impressive. The second week saw me paint up two artillery batteries, some generals, hussar regiment, jager battalion and salvage a half-painted and very battered infantry regiment that had lingered on my messy painting table for years.
Pictured above are the finished results: 7 infantry battalions, jager battalion, 2 light cavalry regiments, 2 batteries and 3 command stands. I'm pleased with the results. I didn't necessarily "speed paint" these figures but I did paint them in an efficient, assembly line process. I ordered some reinforcements for the Austrians although I still have some more jager, skirmishers, cavalry and artillery to paint from the original army set. Ideally id like to paint up 3-4 brigades of infantry (12-16 battalions of line, 3-4 jager battalions, 3-4 artillery batteries) and some additional cavalry and artillery.
This is what an Austrian Brigade will look like: 4 infantry battalions, cavalry regiment, an artillery battery and a battalion of jagers with a Brigade command base.
Closeup of the infantry (from the rear). I always like the look of the Austrian uniforms with the white coats and blue pants.
Here are some pictures of the salvaged line infantry that had been lingering on my hobby table for years. They were battered with chipped paint and some of the figures on the strips had broken bayonets so I clipped them off and replaced them with intact sculpts. I had run out of line infantry so I made this command stand a little different with the mounted commander urging the infantry on.
Austrian Jagers. I decided to make the feathers on their hats more green than black for a nice color pop (I think they were actually black with a green iridescence). I placed 5 figures per base to give the impression of dense swarms of skirmishers.
The Baccus army pack also includes a number of line infantry skirmishing. I will paint them as grenz although I have read that the grenz were no longer irregular skirmishing infantry by 1859 and were converted to line infantry. Reading through orders of battle, it seems some Austrian infantry brigades have a grenz battalion attached in lieu of jagers so I am thinking they may have still acted as light infantry in some capacity.
Austrian artillery with dapper dressed crews in their chocolate brown tunics. It was a tight squeeze to get all the crewman to fit on the base with the gun.
The beefed up uhlans. If you notice, the bases on these fellas are a bit lighter. I accidentally painted them with Teddy Bear Tan instead of Coffee Latte.
Vibrant and colorful hussars. I believe this is the 10th Hussars, they have "grass green" shako covers which give a nice look. Basing for these figures is fairly simple. 3mm thick bases (20mm squares with 3mm rounded corners from Litko), fine sand affixed by glue painted with "coffee latte" brown craft paint, drybrushed and some medum green turf added.
Command stands. The ones with two figures will be brigade commanders. For the army commander, I will probably add a few figures and maybe use a 30mm base.
I have a few more jager, grenz, dragoons and artillery to paint up. Once these last few bits of the Austrians are done, I will likely move over to painting up the French opposition while I await additional Austrians to add to the army. I also have 1866 Austrians, Piedmontese and Prussian...I will probably hold off on tackling these once the French and Austrians are complete. I still need to finish up those 17th century Poles....


























































