$ 50.00
NEW! IN STOCK!
During the American War for Independence most of the German troops were required to be clean shaven. Musketeers wore their hair quite long with a tightly wrapped queue or zopf that extended to the middle of the back. Side locks were worn, two to each side in the form of two horizontal curls at each side of the face. Lt. Johann Carl Philipp von Krafft, a soldier of Capt. Eigenbrod’s Grenadier company, stated in his diary that, “From this time, since Philadelphia we had to wear hair-locks again”. This would seem to indicate that the men had false queues if not real ones. On parade the hair was normally powdered in keeping with period custom, something that would persist throughout the century.
1/30 Scale
Matte Finish
Single Figure
$ 68.00
NEW! IN STOCK! French Royal Deux-Ponts Ensign with Color, 1781 This junior officer of the Royal Deux Ponts (Zweibrucken) carries the wonderfully ornate standard, the drapeau d’ordonnance of the regiment...
$ 48.00
NEW! IN STOCK! Washington was appointed as Lieutenant Colonel of the Virginia Regiment in 1755, following the death of the previous commander. His first significant action came during the campaign...
$ 52.00
NEW! IN STOCK! The Régiment de Deux-Ponts was a prestigious part of the French Royal Army, composed largely of german-speaking soldiers from the Duchy of Deux-Ponts region (in present-day Germany). Officers...
$ 48.00
NEW! IN STOCK! British 43rd Regiment of Foot Casualty Falling, 1780 Flintlock muskets were the mainstay of European armies between 1660 and 1840. Typically, these muzzle-loading smoothbore long guns were...