Akhal-Teke (Traditional 1:9 by Breyer)

5 (5 votes)

Review and images by Harecraft Horses; edited by bmathison1972

Today we’ll be looking at one of 2022’s regular runs by Breyer, the one I was most excited to see and own – Adamek the Akhal-Teke stallion.

He is absolutely stunning!

I loved this sculpt right from when it was first revealed, it really nails the conformation and character of the breed, and although I was sad the two best Akhal-Teke colours got used up on unattainably rare and expensive exclusives (a sooty buckskin to the Premier Club, then metallic cremello for a limited Breyerfest SR), I do think this colour looks good on him. There’s just enough metallic sheen to the paintjob to capture the famous golden coat, without it looking at all overdone or decorator-ish, and there’s so much shading it doesn’t look flat or boring despite being yet another solid bay for my collection. There’s no way this horse will ever blend in and be boring, look at him!

His markings are great too; I know they’re based on a real horse rather than an aesthetic choice by the Breyer designers, but the four white socks really lift the colouring, and the big star and snip on his face are lovely – an off-centre pink nose always gives a horse an appealingly quirky face.

And if you look closely, you’ll see something remarkable : the face markings are mapped, that halo of dark skin showing clear through the fine peach-fuzz on a horse’s muzzle, and even on the forehead on this ancient desert breeds with such a sleek short coat. Breyer have dappled in mapping before, so we know they can do it, but it’s always been saved as an added level of detail for exclusive releases, the limited editions and club models, small runs and one-of-a-kinds – never on anything ‘basic’ for the regular run range. I love it!

His expression is so sharp and alert, and of course this dynamic pose gives him a huge amount of movement and life. One of my favourite horsey books is ‘Golden Horse’ by photographer Artur Baboev (chances are if you’ve ever looked up photos of the Akhal-Teke online, you’ve seen some of his work), and this sculpt really reminds me of those pictures : a horse free and playing, enjoying his own speed and strength.

I like to give my models a name from the right language and naming traditions, and one of the easiest ways to do this is to borrow them from real horse pedigrees. So I looked up Adamek, and scrolled back through the generations, til I found a name which appealed – hmm, Melekush, that’s nice? But it’s always worth a quick run through Google, just to make sure a name doesn’t translate to something which wouldn’t be fitting (like a meaning of ‘dark’ for a palomino, or ‘white legs’ for one with not a speck of white on it, hah), and in this case it was fine – apparently it means ‘angel’, which isn’t colour-dependent at all.

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