- Baroque style - noble and proud look with compact and elegant body
- Straight or slightly convex profile, nicely shaped ears and slightly arched and muscular neck
- Long sloping and muscular shoulders, round and slightly sloping croup
- Noble head with convex profile, wide forehead, and large eyes
- Arched and high set neck, deep chest, long and muscular shoulders
- Short back, sloping croup, small feet, low set tail
| Andalusian stallion |
| Lusitano stallion |
| Andalusian stallion |
The Placings:
🥇1st: Horse C - Mini Alborozo
In first place, I pinned the mini Alborozo. In my opinion, the traditional scale Alborozo is one of the most correct Spanish horses in the lineup, and his shrunken counterpart is no different. He has a very Baroque look, with a straight profile and arched neck. His hooves are nicely proportioned with his body as well, and he has a nice rounded croup. This run in particular does have a slight molding flaw that I've brought up before - his neck is slightly thin and pinched, likely due to the run being molded in the old plastic (read more about it here!) This is a problem limited to the Valerios, and I'd likely place a new plastic run over the Valerio if it was nice enough. That being said, the molding flaw is not enough for me to knock him lower than first in this particular class.
🥈2nd: Horse B - Cantering Andalusian
I pinned the Cantering Andalusian second. I show this particular model as a Lusitano, as I generally feel he fits that breed standard better (even though the two are nearly identical.) Like mini Alborozo, he works anatomically and biomechanically. His shoulder is a little shorter than I'd like to see, and his feet are a little big as well. His mane gives him some weird optical illusions with his back, but it's perfectly fine if you take the mane out of the equation. There's a lot of things I like about the sculpt, but for this class I personally like the Alborozo better in breed.
🥉3rd: Horse A - G3 Rearing Andalusian
My third place pin is the G3 Rearing Andalusian. Compared to the other two sculpts, he is more cartoonish (this is pretty typical across the board for the G3 and some of the G4 sculpts). His back left hoof additionally has the appearance of being clubbed, which is a major conformational fault. He's not terrible when compared to the breed standard, but a club foot is a universally undesirable trait in horses, and it's enough to knock him below the min Alborozo and the Cantering Andalusian. He's a model with lovely shading, but this particular run is far better as a collectability entry.
How did you pin this class? Did you notice how your placings changed from judging this on collectability? Remember, the rarest model on the table isn't necessarily the best breed horse!
Tiny, piggy eyes on the Alborozo...I'd place him 2nd behind the cantering guy.
ReplyDeleteI placed them C, B, A. I must admit I did not notice the hind foot on A that you said is clubbed: since it is a universal part of that mold, I didn't think about it but I see the point of it being a flaw if it were a living horse.
ReplyDeleteI would place them B great color and shading correct conformation when you look through the mane illusion, C I would put this one first in a different color but this one is a flat odd color and the eyes are not nice. The mold is very breed correct. A. Great color but every hoof is a different size.
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