As a kid I thought maybe they were just cleaning the
1980 catalogue, this was also one of the little 'thumbnails' (as we'd call them now) on the 'Long Box' box type.
1982 catalogue image gave us two of the thumbnails, these make for nice painting guides.
Sorting!
In the Crimea, the whole regiment was layed-low by a bug that went round...hey; old jokes work!
Hermitage Dairy tea-leaf collectors cards - Black Watch 1800's, officer on the left, private on the right.
Prince/Prinze August painting guide
One of those weird throwbacks to that point
in print-history where commercial art was giving way to full-colour
photography; yet some editors continued to use artists, to convert what were
obviously photographs! Think also; Hamlyn's Wargaming book (David Nash) or
Usborne's model guides.
On this card model of a castle from Dawson
& Co., we see the Highland Infantry have been used to illustrate the scale
of the fort (and its play value) which the artist has rendered beautifully -
even down to their bases, or the shadows of the drawbridge where it stands
slightly proud of the table after folding and/or gluing.
All bar the 'stupid' poses from what must
be one set, although one 'stabbing-down-guy' has got into shot and you might
have expected the piper and standard to be used? Either the bases were painted
to match where they were to be positioned on the finished model, or they were
posed unpainted and the artist added colour? I don't suppose we'll ever know!