Tuesday, 27 January 2026

Restoring Jes Goodwin's Masterful Adeptus Sororitas Seraphim

Evening all,

After a particularly long and verbose staff meeting I was able to snatch a few moments in the workshop before the needs of MFM's hungry tummy arose. The mass of old figures inside my old miniatures box await repair, restoration and photographing and I was able to tinker with these figures a little. They had survived unscathed save from the odd bent support strut and a couple of detached backpacks. A little glue and red paint and they are good to go. 

And what figures they are!

Beautifully designed and joyfully, all metal castings. I've seen here and there that the mighty Jes Goodwin is retiring for GW after all these years. So it was poignant to return these to my collection. Such a skilled artist, especially with 40k and of course, the elves. It could easily be argued the Jes Goodwin was the greatest miniature sculptor of all time, especially in the 1980s. In metal at any rate. Though Kev Adams could also lift that crown for very different reasons.

Jes Goodwin's work is always very technically proficient. Plausible in a fantastic setting. His models have their own signature style. You can recognise his work instantly and his elves/eldar have never been bettered by anyone.

Nor will they. As we live in an age of multi-kit printed plastic which will eventually snap, crack or be crushed. These chunky metal classics are far more robust and likely to be around for centuries to come one way or another. 

   

My memories of painting these take me back to my days lodging in Braintree. I was a young teacher, single and in a new place. I had no friends in the local area and my colleagues were friendly, but far older than me. My weekends were mine to fill as I wished. I lavished an entire weekend over many of these figures. Painting numerous layers of Blood Red on the armour and carefully edge highlighting in orange. 

I can't remember if this was an official colour scheme I copied from WD or the Codex back in the day or one of my own invention. I have a few memories of creating my own background from the Witchunters Codex. But they are hazy after twenty odd years. 

I've got a whole army of Battle Sisters to repair and restore, including an inquisitor and retinue and a squad of Deathwatch marines. I fielded them only once in the GW store in Long Wire Street in Colchester just before I threw in the towel and went retro. This army took me over two years to paint and put together and the opponents on offer had lazy, undercoated models at best. It was all about the interpretation of the current codex and not the beauty of the setting and models. I feel that though these models have nothing to do with our regular content, you can appreciate them for what they are.

Masterpieces of miniature design.

I hope you readers share my love of the beauty of Jes Goodwin's metals. And that my paintwork has done them justice.

Orlygg

14 comments:

  1. Nice! Those are great sculpts - I didn't realise that they were Goodwin's work. I love his eldar and I agree that they've never been bettered. Likewise, his old Necromunda sculpts are superb. Those look great and your painting has definitely done them justice. I look forward to seeing the others!

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    1. Thanks Toby... its hard to think about GW without the influence of Goodwin's sculpting. Not that the modern GW bears any resemblance to what it was circa 2005, let alone 1989. Thankfully, there are oodles of second hand gubbins out there to keep us affectionardos entertained for decades to come. Our beloved metals also have the distinction of being pretty much indestructible.

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  2. These look fantastic, truly out of the Red Era! Beautiful work indeed and I totally agree about Jes Goodwin!

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    1. Thank you Suber! Wasn't the red era the one before? Mid to late '90s?

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  3. Very nice indeed, and yes Jes is the GOAT of sci fi miniatures sculptors.

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  4. I still have WD in which these were presented, and then when they were fighting battle against oldie Necrons. Ace paintjob on brilliant sculpts!

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    1. I'll have to track down that issue as I cannot recall it. Thanks for the tip Demi (:

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  5. Those still hold up today, in my opinion anyway. You did a fabulous job on them.

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    1. A well designed miniature that has character and charm holds up forever in my opinion. Some of the plastic toot GW push these days is utterly ghastly. In time, enthusiasts will realise that (;

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  6. His Skaven are still the best all these years later.

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  7. Very nice! That's a nice fiery red, and I like how the cool white balances it.

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    1. I am glad you spotted that. I thought at the time it was a striking combination. I think I may have inverted the scheme from a white armour with red trimmings that was in the army book.

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