I keep hitting painters block, so I get something easy out that needs something done to it, like cleaning a model's mold lines, or regluing a model that broke, etc. I find it helps at least get some stuff cleared off the table and sometimes you get motivated to start painting or take care of other chores.
It's also partially that I hold myself to a substantially higher standard than I did when I was 15 years old (and even then, my painting wasn't egregious), and I have't spent a lot of that time painting.
So, the challenge of getting a dark blue working up to a very light blue/white, with cleanly-delineated spots and seams of fleshy pink, and a decent bone gradient for the weaponry, and black with purple/grey highlights on the armor... is...
Well, I want it to look good!
Also, the GW palette pad is great! I've never used a palette before, and this is awesome! I'm contemplating 'building' a wet palette, but... I'm not sure how necessary that is, and not sure how much I want to thin my paints when I'm having to put a lot of very light colors over darks.
Also, the GW palette pad is great! I've never used a palette before, and this is awesome! I'm contemplating 'building' a wet palette, but... I'm not sure how necessary that is, and not sure how much I want to thin my paints when I'm having to put a lot of very light colors over darks.
A wet palette has nothing to do with thinning paints - it extends your working time by keeping paint from drying out. The whole point of palettes in general is controlling paint on the brush and giving you a space to work with your paints. The GW pads do their job perfectly well, they let you put paint down, mix it, thin it, do what ever you want with it, and with miniatures, you're generally working with small amounts of paint anyways, so it's not a big deal if you only get five minutes or so of work time out of a particular dab.
I just like my wet palette because a: it lets me do what I want with my paint and keep multiple colors workable while I screw around and do my thing, and it cost me free 99 to make. :biggrin:
So the first marine I'd painted in 15 years was the pickle jar marine....
My wife told me last night, when almost done my Lord of Contagion, that I've improved.
He's done finally this morning, and I think she's right :biggrin:
That Vader is fantastic, Keany. I love the faint OSL glow from the saber, subtle and top-notch.
Way too many OSL jobs I've seen treat the mini like it's in a pitch black room and it overwhelms the rest of the painting. Yours hits the mark just right.
I'm up to around £500 in confirmed sales of my excess crap, with another £300ish to go.
Oh and I got around to priming the mechanicum cranes, so I have painted something.
Technically.
I finally noticed .com doesn't list your auctions, only .co.uk
Also to motivate me to paint more, I'm slowly working on my favorite game ever. Just wish I played it.
A shitty picture of my Goliaths on my pc desk.
bobAkirafett on
+3
Options
Gabriel_Pitt(effective against Russian warships)Registered Userregular
In-progress models have their charm.
"We will blind our enemies with our white bases and vibrant primary colors!"
I finally noticed .com doesn't list your auctions, only .co.uk
International shipping, it is an amazing pain in the ass.
Especially when people try and by from Italy. :bigfrown:
Anyway, enough ripping on the Italian postal system. I don't usually post much in the way of WIP pics, but since I finished the Redemptor, I've been doing _work_
I'm going to work on the paneling and get that done before I start shading up the gray I've blocked in. I don't want to use that light/dark green combo from the doors over all that side paneling - I think that's a little too much and a little too bright for the whole thing. Does anyone have any recommendations for what they think would look good?
Dull brownish red was my first thought, but would that be too Christmasy with the greens? Maybe a kind of rusty dull orange? Full on browns seem like it would be too much of the same color across the board, to me.
Any thoughts that anyone would like to contribute would be greatly appreciated!
Going to start painting my Masons for Guild Ball soon. I have them primed and based white. They wear a decent amount of armor, is there any advantage or reason to wash the armor bits with some P3 armor wash and the fleshy parts with some Army Painter flesh tone ink/wash before actually painting the model?
tehjester on
PSN: JesterKing13 Blizz Battletag: tehjester#1448
0
Options
Gabriel_Pitt(effective against Russian warships)Registered Userregular
Yes, because that can be a big help in defining recesses, outlines, and edges that you then work up from. If you've checked out any of the WarhammerTV video links from the thread, you'll note that a wash is usually the step taken after the base color.
What is guildball? It looks like a blood bowl/dungeon bowl game?
Its sort of like blood bowl but instead of using an entire team of like 12, you have a squad of 6. You use a captain, a mascot, and four other team members. Each Guild has a theme to it, like the Butchers are the damage dealers, Masons are the balanced team, Morticians are the control guild, Alchemists are all about status effects, so on and so forth. Compared to games like Blood Bowl, it is really simple to actually play. Plus, Steamforged makes some pretty sweet minis to paint!
PSN: JesterKing13 Blizz Battletag: tehjester#1448
0
Options
Gabriel_Pitt(effective against Russian warships)Registered Userregular
Their booth and demos at Adepticon looked really sweet, but I'm working hard NOT to tempt myself into picking up any further games. I heard a lot of good things about it on the now defunct Eternal Warriors podcast.
Still when they do washes and oils on the demos on Warhammer Tv they make it look easy
Well, with a little practice, they are pretty easy. I adapted a lot of the things I saw on there into my Redemptor dread, which pretty much took one try to get it right, and lead to me asking myself, "why haven't I always done it this way, it IS so easy!"
_Amazing._ I make a yam cassarole so good, you'd swear I had your gramma hiding in my kitchen.
Although the bottom has nearly corroded through on that one. Good thing I have a can of turnip greens waiting to be put to use once I'm done with them.
Guildball takes a lot of its core mechanics from Warmachine and Hordes at the very least in a inspired by way.
+1
Options
Dr_KeenbeanDumb as a buttPlanet Express ShipRegistered Userregular
What @Gabriel_Pitt doesn't realize is that I got a free copy of the 2 player Guild Ball starter in my swag bag at last NOVA and it's going to find its still-shrink-wrapped way into his suitcase while he crashes at my house next week.
I’m starting to work on a bunch of bloodletters and assorted Khorne stuff, but I’m not sure what scheme I want to go with for the fleshy stuff.
All the metals are going to be bright shiny gold and gloss black, but I just got finished with a big blood and bone tyranid army so those colors are right out for the daemons.
Thinking something like a mottled green, like those Galapagos ocean iguanas. Just a bunch of dirty blackish-green lizard monsters with swords.
I’m starting to work on a bunch of bloodletters and assorted Khorne stuff, but I’m not sure what scheme I want to go with for the fleshy stuff.
All the metals are going to be bright shiny gold and gloss black, but I just got finished with a big blood and bone tyranid army so those colors are right out for the daemons.
Thinking something like a mottled green, like those Galapagos ocean iguanas. Just a bunch of dirty blackish-green lizard monsters with swords.
Sounds like a good scheme to me. That'd be an intetrstimg variation on the usual coloration.
There is no reason to be so aggressive about this.
Look at this no-skubber over here.
Doesn't know that the joy of skub is the only thing worth fighting for.
I bet he paints straight from the pot too.:snap:
Duh, brushes don't fit inside the dropper bottles!
DiannaoChong on
+1
Options
-Loki-Don't pee in my mouth and tell me it's raining.Registered Userregular
I finally painted something again - a Malifaux Gremlin, Trixibelle.
+7
Options
ArcticLancerBest served chilled.Registered Userregular
edited March 2018
My dropfleet commander order came in today (from the TTCombat takeover sale). Actually having stuff in hand, I have no regrets even if these miniatures probably cost too much for what they are. But fuck, the detail is just ... _figurative drool_.
I got two battleships and a non-kickstarter battlecruiser (to go along with the 2 kickstarter ones), and man are they huge. I mean, I had some expectations because it's not like the cruisers in the game are small, but like ... Jesus. At some point in my life I'm going to have a really good time with all the UCM dropfleet stuff. I wish the game was better, but at least I've got a bunch of rad spaceship minis~
My dropfleet commander order came in today (from the TTCombat takeover sale). Actually having stuff in hand, I have no regrets even if these miniatures probably cost too much for what they are. But fuck, the detail is just ... _figurative drool_.
I got two battleships and a non-kickstarter battlecruiser (to go along with the 2 kickstarter ones), and man are they huge. I mean, I had some expectations because it's not like the cruisers in the game are small, but like ... Jesus. At some point in my life I'm going to have a really good time with all the UCM dropfleet stuff. I wish the game was better, but at least I've got a bunch of rad spaceship minis~
I just bought some DZC infantry to use for another game, kinda based on pictures alone. They look so good.
It's kind of a shame there aren't more options for 10mm scale sci-fi figs on the market. Also, like, 90% of that market is based in the UK for...reasons?
0
Options
valhalla13013 Dark Shield Perceives the GodsRegistered Userregular
My dropfleet commander order came in today (from the TTCombat takeover sale). Actually having stuff in hand, I have no regrets even if these miniatures probably cost too much for what they are. But fuck, the detail is just ... _figurative drool_.
I got two battleships and a non-kickstarter battlecruiser (to go along with the 2 kickstarter ones), and man are they huge. I mean, I had some expectations because it's not like the cruisers in the game are small, but like ... Jesus. At some point in my life I'm going to have a really good time with all the UCM dropfleet stuff. I wish the game was better, but at least I've got a bunch of rad spaceship minis~
I just bought some DZC infantry to use for another game, kinda based on pictures alone. They look so good.
It's kind of a shame there aren't more options for 10mm scale sci-fi figs on the market. Also, like, 90% of that market is based in the UK for...reasons?
I'm pretty sure the reason is that wargaming is far and away more popular in the UK than almost anywhere else in the world by a pretty silly margin. It's a shame the hobby isn't bigger in NA.
H.G Wells, Napoleon/Wellington, Operation Overlord and Games Workshop, pretty much. With a side of Tolkein.
First is reputed to have written the first rule set for wargames with toy soldiers, second is one of the most popular settings and reason why mass battle systems are this mix of morale/limited shooting/brutal melee. Overlord had actual big maps and 'toy soldiers' on it in to chart the progression of the invasion (like the battle of Britain maps where fighter and bomber squadrons were shuffled across a huge map to track their progress). Games workshop turned this niche hobby into something you could find on most high streets.
Highstreet in the US is a different beast than the UK (mostly due to car use and population density), and until recently language barriers have still been quite a big deal with translating things to the rest of Europe. GW were not going to be easily able to replicate the success of their stores in the UK in the 90s to Europe in the 00s, and are now competing even more against video games etc - without a previous generation being really into historicals and airfix kits, and seeing this as the closest thing to their old hobbies.
...First is reputed to have written the first rule set for wargames with toy soldiers
He didn't invent the ruleset entirely solo, but with help from others modernized the concept with his own game titled "Little Wars", and was the first to widely distribute a printed ruleset/history of the game in 1913 (which is a fascinating read if anyone is curious).
Basically the players used lead soldiers and shot wooden matchsticks at them with actual miniature "cannons" (if the model fell down, it was a casualty). Later he added rules for close combat, prisoners, calvalry, capturing opponent's cannons, and retreats.
SmokeStacks on
+2
Options
Dr_KeenbeanDumb as a buttPlanet Express ShipRegistered Userregular
As a side note, if you go looking for Little Wars (it's public domain), remember that it was written in 1913 so even suggesting that women and girls could play it was incredibly progressive thinking for the time. Because its full title is ... problematic ... when viewed through a modern lens.
It's sure great that the wargaming hobby no longer has so much overt misogyny!
To flesh out my growing Death Guard I picked up another 2 Lords of Contagion from Ebay for like $4 a piece. Planning on running them as a supreme command detachment and painting them as different Vectorums because A) easy identification and Fun...
The one at the top of the page is your standard Death Guard Green guy. Planning on doing a Favoured Sons Lord (metal armor, green trim) and a Glooming Lords Lord (Black armor, green trim)
Gloming Lords - Black armor, elysian green trim, different shade of green cape and purple tinted guts? Or maybe purple hued guts and a sackcloth brown cape?
Favoured Sons Lord - Metallic/leadbelcher Armor, Death guard green trim, black cape, whitish-blue corpsey guts?
What colors would make sense for capes and guts?
AGH... then I need contrasting smoke colors and axe hafts as well!!
To flesh out my growing Death Guard I picked up another 2 Lords of Contagion from Ebay for like $4 a piece. Planning on running them as a supreme command detachment and painting them as different Vectorums because A) easy identification and Fun...
The one at the top of the page is your standard Death Guard Green guy. Planning on doing a Favoured Sons Lord (metal armor, green trim) and a Glooming Lords Lord (Black armor, green trim)
Gloming Lords - Black armor, elysian green trim, different shade of green cape and purple tinted guts? Or maybe purple hued guts and a sackcloth brown cape?
Favoured Sons Lord - Metallic/leadbelcher Armor, Death guard green trim, black cape, whitish-blue corpsey guts?
What colors would make sense for capes and guts?
AGH... then I need contrasting smoke colors and axe hafts as well!!
I won't claim to understand much about 40k, but your description makes it sound like they're going to be run as one unit, so that's the angle I'm (perhaps entirely incorrectly) approaching this from. :P
You would benefit from having something that ties all of them a little closer together as opposed to what would otherwise look like 3 separate mans running around. A good way to do that would be to simply give them all the same colour cape and guts. A shared kneepad design or helmet colour are options that go further, but I don't think they're as recognizable as a big ol' cape will be.
To flesh out my growing Death Guard I picked up another 2 Lords of Contagion from Ebay for like $4 a piece. Planning on running them as a supreme command detachment and painting them as different Vectorums because A) easy identification and Fun...
The one at the top of the page is your standard Death Guard Green guy. Planning on doing a Favoured Sons Lord (metal armor, green trim) and a Glooming Lords Lord (Black armor, green trim)
Gloming Lords - Black armor, elysian green trim, different shade of green cape and purple tinted guts? Or maybe purple hued guts and a sackcloth brown cape?
Favoured Sons Lord - Metallic/leadbelcher Armor, Death guard green trim, black cape, whitish-blue corpsey guts?
What colors would make sense for capes and guts?
AGH... then I need contrasting smoke colors and axe hafts as well!!
I won't claim to understand much about 40k, but your description makes it sound like they're going to be run as one unit, so that's the angle I'm (perhaps entirely incorrectly) approaching this from. :P
You would benefit from having something that ties all of them a little closer together as opposed to what would otherwise look like 3 separate mans running around. A good way to do that would be to simply give them all the same colour cape and guts. A shared kneepad design or helmet colour are options that go further, but I don't think they're as recognizable as a big ol' cape will be.
Probably... the guys I typically play with get really put off by having a Lord of Contagion (a slow moving, extremely tanky, melee unit that teleports into play) dropped into their backlines while everything else is moving upfield.
I am hoping three dropped in back will be truly unsettling for them.
To flesh out my growing Death Guard I picked up another 2 Lords of Contagion from Ebay for like $4 a piece. Planning on running them as a supreme command detachment and painting them as different Vectorums because A) easy identification and Fun...
The one at the top of the page is your standard Death Guard Green guy. Planning on doing a Favoured Sons Lord (metal armor, green trim) and a Glooming Lords Lord (Black armor, green trim)
Gloming Lords - Black armor, elysian green trim, different shade of green cape and purple tinted guts? Or maybe purple hued guts and a sackcloth brown cape?
Favoured Sons Lord - Metallic/leadbelcher Armor, Death guard green trim, black cape, whitish-blue corpsey guts?
What colors would make sense for capes and guts?
AGH... then I need contrasting smoke colors and axe hafts as well!!
Ooh, you should try to tie in each one with one of the three skulls of the death guard symbol
Little off topic, but I've been making my own foam trays instead of painting lately, and it sure does take a while to cut out all these damn slots. The necromunda Goliaths really don't seem to be posed to store well either. But they ARE posed cool.
Posts
So, the challenge of getting a dark blue working up to a very light blue/white, with cleanly-delineated spots and seams of fleshy pink, and a decent bone gradient for the weaponry, and black with purple/grey highlights on the armor... is...
Well, I want it to look good!
Also, the GW palette pad is great! I've never used a palette before, and this is awesome! I'm contemplating 'building' a wet palette, but... I'm not sure how necessary that is, and not sure how much I want to thin my paints when I'm having to put a lot of very light colors over darks.
My wife told me last night, when almost done my Lord of Contagion, that I've improved.
He's done finally this morning, and I think she's right :biggrin:
Now to find something to base with...
Gamertag - Khraul
PSN - Razide6
I just like my wet palette because a: it lets me do what I want with my paint and keep multiple colors workable while I screw around and do my thing, and it cost me free 99 to make. :biggrin:
Gross
(but in a good way)
I finally noticed .com doesn't list your auctions, only .co.uk
Also to motivate me to paint more, I'm slowly working on my favorite game ever. Just wish I played it.
A shitty picture of my Goliaths on my pc desk.
"We will blind our enemies with our white bases and vibrant primary colors!"
International shipping, it is an amazing pain in the ass.
Especially when people try and by from Italy. :bigfrown:
Anyway, enough ripping on the Italian postal system. I don't usually post much in the way of WIP pics, but since I finished the Redemptor, I've been doing _work_
I'm going to work on the paneling and get that done before I start shading up the gray I've blocked in. I don't want to use that light/dark green combo from the doors over all that side paneling - I think that's a little too much and a little too bright for the whole thing. Does anyone have any recommendations for what they think would look good?
Dull brownish red was my first thought, but would that be too Christmasy with the greens? Maybe a kind of rusty dull orange? Full on browns seem like it would be too much of the same color across the board, to me.
Any thoughts that anyone would like to contribute would be greatly appreciated!
What is guildball? It looks like a blood bowl/dungeon bowl game?
Still when they do washes and oils on the demos on Warhammer Tv they make it look easy
Its sort of like blood bowl but instead of using an entire team of like 12, you have a squad of 6. You use a captain, a mascot, and four other team members. Each Guild has a theme to it, like the Butchers are the damage dealers, Masons are the balanced team, Morticians are the control guild, Alchemists are all about status effects, so on and so forth. Compared to games like Blood Bowl, it is really simple to actually play. Plus, Steamforged makes some pretty sweet minis to paint!
Guild Ball
Their booth and demos at Adepticon looked really sweet, but I'm working hard NOT to tempt myself into picking up any further games. I heard a lot of good things about it on the now defunct Eternal Warriors podcast.
Well, with a little practice, they are pretty easy. I adapted a lot of the things I saw on there into my Redemptor dread, which pretty much took one try to get it right, and lead to me asking myself, "why haven't I always done it this way, it IS so easy!"
_Amazing._ I make a yam cassarole so good, you'd swear I had your gramma hiding in my kitchen.
Although the bottom has nearly corroded through on that one. Good thing I have a can of turnip greens waiting to be put to use once I'm done with them.
3DS: 1650-8480-6786
Switch: SW-0653-8208-4705
All the metals are going to be bright shiny gold and gloss black, but I just got finished with a big blood and bone tyranid army so those colors are right out for the daemons.
Thinking something like a mottled green, like those Galapagos ocean iguanas. Just a bunch of dirty blackish-green lizard monsters with swords.
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
Edit: and because it's awesome.
Edit edit: But mostly because of the pro-Skubb thing.
Sounds like a good scheme to me. That'd be an intetrstimg variation on the usual coloration.
There is no reason to be so aggressive about this.
Look at this no-skubber over here.
Doesn't know that the joy of skub is the only thing worth fighting for.
I bet he paints straight from the pot too.:snap:
Duh, brushes don't fit inside the dropper bottles!
I got two battleships and a non-kickstarter battlecruiser (to go along with the 2 kickstarter ones), and man are they huge. I mean, I had some expectations because it's not like the cruisers in the game are small, but like ... Jesus. At some point in my life I'm going to have a really good time with all the UCM dropfleet stuff. I wish the game was better, but at least I've got a bunch of rad spaceship minis~
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
I just bought some DZC infantry to use for another game, kinda based on pictures alone. They look so good.
It's kind of a shame there aren't more options for 10mm scale sci-fi figs on the market. Also, like, 90% of that market is based in the UK for...reasons?
B-b-b-But goblins aren't supposed to look like that!!!
I'm pretty sure the reason is that wargaming is far and away more popular in the UK than almost anywhere else in the world by a pretty silly margin. It's a shame the hobby isn't bigger in NA.
First is reputed to have written the first rule set for wargames with toy soldiers, second is one of the most popular settings and reason why mass battle systems are this mix of morale/limited shooting/brutal melee. Overlord had actual big maps and 'toy soldiers' on it in to chart the progression of the invasion (like the battle of Britain maps where fighter and bomber squadrons were shuffled across a huge map to track their progress). Games workshop turned this niche hobby into something you could find on most high streets.
Highstreet in the US is a different beast than the UK (mostly due to car use and population density), and until recently language barriers have still been quite a big deal with translating things to the rest of Europe. GW were not going to be easily able to replicate the success of their stores in the UK in the 90s to Europe in the 00s, and are now competing even more against video games etc - without a previous generation being really into historicals and airfix kits, and seeing this as the closest thing to their old hobbies.
He didn't invent the ruleset entirely solo, but with help from others modernized the concept with his own game titled "Little Wars", and was the first to widely distribute a printed ruleset/history of the game in 1913 (which is a fascinating read if anyone is curious).
Basically the players used lead soldiers and shot wooden matchsticks at them with actual miniature "cannons" (if the model fell down, it was a casualty). Later he added rules for close combat, prisoners, calvalry, capturing opponent's cannons, and retreats.
It's sure great that the wargaming hobby no longer has so much overt misogyny!
3DS: 1650-8480-6786
Switch: SW-0653-8208-4705
To flesh out my growing Death Guard I picked up another 2 Lords of Contagion from Ebay for like $4 a piece. Planning on running them as a supreme command detachment and painting them as different Vectorums because A) easy identification and Fun...
The one at the top of the page is your standard Death Guard Green guy. Planning on doing a Favoured Sons Lord (metal armor, green trim) and a Glooming Lords Lord (Black armor, green trim)
Gloming Lords - Black armor, elysian green trim, different shade of green cape and purple tinted guts? Or maybe purple hued guts and a sackcloth brown cape?
Favoured Sons Lord - Metallic/leadbelcher Armor, Death guard green trim, black cape, whitish-blue corpsey guts?
What colors would make sense for capes and guts?
AGH... then I need contrasting smoke colors and axe hafts as well!!
Gamertag - Khraul
PSN - Razide6
I won't claim to understand much about 40k, but your description makes it sound like they're going to be run as one unit, so that's the angle I'm (perhaps entirely incorrectly) approaching this from. :P
You would benefit from having something that ties all of them a little closer together as opposed to what would otherwise look like 3 separate mans running around. A good way to do that would be to simply give them all the same colour cape and guts. A shared kneepad design or helmet colour are options that go further, but I don't think they're as recognizable as a big ol' cape will be.
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
Probably... the guys I typically play with get really put off by having a Lord of Contagion (a slow moving, extremely tanky, melee unit that teleports into play) dropped into their backlines while everything else is moving upfield.
I am hoping three dropped in back will be truly unsettling for them.
Gamertag - Khraul
PSN - Razide6
Ooh, you should try to tie in each one with one of the three skulls of the death guard symbol