Did Spanish horse of this period use the "full on" charge with the sword, or did they use pistols (whether en caracole or a similar format), or a mix of both?
One thing to note though is that Milne magnifies the central emblems and devices on the flags (irrespective of period) which is what I think has led to the fashion for wargames units to have flags where (scale wise) the central device would be three or four feet across, rather than the physical one...
I'd say that the 1660s probably saw a transition from the ECW style of flag (St George's cross in the upper canton next to the staff, colour of the field unrelated to the coat/facing colour) to the late 17th/early 18th Century style (St George's cross covering the entire flag, colour of the "field" ...
I would suggest going the opposite way. The Perry box is about 50% wearing overcoats; with a good paint job, you can represent these as the "duster"-type linen coats that the French often wore over their waistcoats during the summer heat in the Peninsula. You will need to either buy two boxes to hav...
Uniforms were pretty much in their infancy in the 1670s, and almost every army's officers dressed differently from their men (I believe that crimson coats were quite common amongst English officers), and sergeants were still wearing reversed colours in some armies well into the the early 1700s.
I think the confusion comes from the use of the term "gris-blanc" which most of us with schoolboy French not unreasonably translate as
"grey-white". But it actually means off-white - I would look to mix a little light tan into your white to give it more of a cream tone, but that's just me.
Fairly sure that the Bavarian army had switched over completely to flintlocks by 1696, as they had already started getting rid of their pikes, which were gone completely by that year, and were using Spanish Riders to defend against cavalry.
Outstanding - good find. Reminds me of the Dutch guy who had a 1:1 Young Guard regiment, using OG 15mm figures. Sadly, this is all I can find of it now:- https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=Young+Guard+15mm+1:1+battalion&rlz=1C1AVNC_enGB582GB582&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiNv4q9qrfcAhW...
The battle of Sedgemoor itself is quite difficult to turn into a good game, as it was fairly one-sided, and it is difficult to get away from that fact without making one side ahistorically strong, or the other ahistorically weak. That said, if you play one side and have the other controlled by an um...