A blog dedicated to model building and painting. It has evolved from 40k, and now encompasses 30k, historical, and scale model building.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Necron Weathering Test
Rather than risk one of the more interesting vehicles, I decided to test my weathering technique out on my monolith. Do I need to rub off more powder before it starts looking right? It just looks off to me. Basically all I did to get the powder on was take a GW tank brush and start scrubbing the surface downward. Is this a case of too much powder, bad technique, or something else? I was hoping it wouldn't hide all of my shading, but the powder kind of blows that away as well. Am I being too critical and it is more of me not seeing the finished product in the in-progress phase. Do I need to do more?
Any help is appreciated!
I think the bottom corner looks fine and I'm pretty anal when it comes to painting, I'm trying to fight that tendency, maybe when I come out of retirement I'll be more of a minimalist.
ReplyDeletewhen applying it only place the powder where you want it, then brush it in :) Otherwise you end up with a very dusty model!
ReplyDeleteI have no experience with weathering powders but to me, it looks like you've used too much.
ReplyDeletePersonally, I think it looks cool, I really like it. Are you planning on varnishing it for game use? If so that spray will knock back a lot of the powder.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Dave
I like it! Gives it a tomb look. Just be sure to brush Verticaly only or it will look like a mess.
ReplyDeleteI think it looks great, like it just rose from the sand.
ReplyDeleteI have found the easiest way to apply the powders, is to use water to make them into a mud, then "paint" the powder where you want it to go. Once it dries, it is back to a nice powder and can be spread, feathered and edited to taste. Hopefully you varnished the model prior to the powder. If you did, then set it in place with some alcohol.
I don't know if this method would work best in this case, but it is how I generally apply powders to vehicles. Keep at it man, it really looks good.