As cold war minis are not as ubiquitous as WW2 or fantasy minis i made a list for sourcing everything needed.
I will try to keep the list updated. Any help or suggestions are appreciated.
Some time yesterday evening in Augusta, Georgia the Canadian Armed Forces engaged Iraqi forces. The Iraqi disposition is not entirely known but they were seen using significant air power in the form of A-10 aircraft and Soviet made Hind helicopters.
When I was first getting back into painting as a hobby I picked up a couple of 1/72 scale boxes of USSR and US troops cheaply. Kind of low quality sculpts but they were good practice.
The above link includes one of the most accurate OOBs for the Late Cold War NVA that currently exists.
It sadly is in German, but still can help with many questions, regarding positioning, equipment etc.
The above example shows a pretty important thing for us wargamers, namely that the same mistakes we make in camo painting also happened in real life too.
Another piece of inspiration: This makeshift camouflage was often seen on West German vehicles until the 3-colour scheme replaced the earlier single-colour "Gelboliv".
Done by vehicle crews it had no formalized pattern and can serve as a nice alternative to single colour German vehicles in your army.
West German Bundesgrenzschutz (Federal Border Guard) men firing an MG1 machine-gun.
BGS troops used a derivate of Wehrmacht "swamp-camo" until 1976, when it was replaced by new green uniforms. Despite that some units have not received new green uniforms until the late 70s or early 80s.
Two 3d printed Luchs 1A2 wheeled recon vehicles.
Those two are on the lookout for East German troops, during a game of my custom Bolt Action Cold War ruleset.
Kanonenjagdpanzer "tank destroyer", M48 tank (I sadly could not get a correct M48A2Ga2 .stl so i used the M48A5 as a stand-in) and M113 APC of the German Heimwehr.
All models are 3d printed and still unfinished.
Two 3D printed (Luckily my potato cam hides their layer lines) BRDM's for my late East German force.
I chose the rather famous 3-colour scheme due to its projected increased use in the 90s, as i am often playing alternative history games.
This is a a CSLA T-72M painted in a three-colour scheme that slightly resembles the modern czech army one.
The CSLA made heavy use of different camo schemes, which is apparent in videos of Warsaw Pact excercises.
This camo-scheme can serve as an inspiration for a late cold war CSLA force.
A failed 3D print turned into a wreck.
This West German Kanonenjagdpanzer did not come out as good as i wanted to, so i turned it into a wreck that can be used as terrain or objective marker.