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I can make two really useless comments:
1) I cannot find any either, and
2) I came to this range late (very late) and grabbed what I thought I 'needed' back in 2021.
Two slightly more useful comments are:
1) regarding 2) above, it took me a while to find all that I wanted, so...
2) keep searching. It is amazing how sets of figures 'come up' from time to time...
Despite not having any actual leads, it is at the very least encouraging to hear that others also share the interest. Having visited Bulgaria this summer I was able to see a few of the battlefields in person and see a couple museums on the war. I even picked up a copy of Quintin Barry’s “War in the East” and have been hooked on it since.
If you were late to the party 2021 James, then I may as well not even show up in 2024. I’ve been branching out to see what is available in other scales. I think I can do a pretty good project in 10mm. Not the same as 1/72 but sometimes you must compromise.
The beauty about going metal is that you will not have to improvise/convert to the same degree.
Although, that is a big part of the fun with 1/72 plastics, I reckon. The Romanians are a case in point.
I have Strelets M053 Sardinians to be Romanian chasseurs, Strelets 108 Russian Hussars with peak removed and bag added on Airfix British hussar horses as Romanian cavalry and proposing to use the Russian artillery or American Civil War artillery as Romanian artillery.
I have used HaT 8200 WWI German Infantry with helmets cut to hats as Romanian line infantry and will add plumes and/or head swaps for Dorobanz.
Strelets Crimean and WWI range are great for Cossacks (former more traditional, latter the uniform version), hussars and uhlans.
For the Turkish artillery, you could always use guns from the American Civil War and either convert Turkish infantry (Crimean even), or convert the Americans.
Some of these ideas I’ve thought of James, others I have not, so thank you for the inspiration! I thought the same thing for the Romanian chasseurs and the artillery, but was a little more stuck on the line infantry, Dorobanz, and cavalry. I’ll have to look into the two conversion options you suggested (I’m not the best at converting figures it must be said).
The Russians are a bit easier. Any union ACW figures work as line infantry, and with some very slight modifications the Ecsi and Strelets Foreign Legion figures make great Russian infantry with havelocks. For guard regiments wwi Russians work great. As you mentioned Cossacks are easy to come by, and the WWI cavalry works good as well.
The Turks are a bit harder to assemble. Any Zouaves work, as do Egyptian infantry for Sudan, and then of course the Strelets sets. You would have to create your own line cavalry, and either convert the artillery or track down Strelets’ brilliant artillery set. Strelets does have a beautiful Bashi-Bazouke set as well, the best I’ve found at any scale.
The only things I’m really stuck on are what to do for the Bulgarian Volunteer battalions, and the Krupp guns so widely used. There’s a lack of late 19th century breech loading artillery in this hobby I’ve found.
But anyways, I’ll think about it some more. The main reason I was drawn to 10mm is because at that scale substitutions and paint job cover ups are less obvious, and pendraken has a wide range of available unit options when drawn from other periods (wwi, Russo-Japanese, Egypt in Sudan, Franco Prussian, ACW…)
While I know absolutely nothing whatsoever about this particular war, I have a thought concerning breech loading artillery.
After the American Civil War the US Army produced only a few guns until around 1900, but in that interim period many of the guns looked a lot like the 12 pound Napoleon, but with an opening breech rather than the closed breech and no cascabel, that's the knob on the breech end.
So I have taken some of my surplus ACW guns and cut the knob off the end and painted them as if they were 1880's artillery and solved the problem using existing equipment.
Here I was making an army for Doctor Doom, he is the prince of Latveria and that country has a small and under equipped army.
I took an ACW 12 pounder Napoleon, and pierced the bell on the breech end and pushed a rod through it. That turned it into a breech loader with the rod being the handle to open the breech. I also updated it to the 1930s or so by adding rubber tires. But by leaving the original wooden spoked wheels you could make it an 1880ish gun, in my opinion.
Close enough, is good enough unless they make exactly what you want.