A blog dedicated to model building and painting. It has evolved from 40k, and now encompasses 30k, historical, and scale model building.
Saturday, November 7, 2009
The Shadowsword Lives
So post terrible frosting mishap, a green stuff scrubbing and some resprays, the shadowsword is looking ok. I really think I had something cool before, but at least this thin is salvageable. I really dislike thick gloppy paint, but unfortunately this guy has it in patches. I believe the testors dull coat caused the problem by drying and contracting the light coat of paint on the surface. It was an interesting effect on areas that were not totally whited out. This guy is due for a dunk in the delvin mud bath, maybe that will tighten things up a bit.
Testors Dullcote = Massive Frosting
These were supposed to be work in progress shots of my shadowsword. I did not expect them to the the last shots of it. Testors dullcote ruined the thing. The kit is entirely destroyed. I am so mad right now. I was very happy with the progress on this vehicle, and now it looks like total crap.
These posts are pre-washing, pre weathering, pre shading. The dull coat also made the paint crack as it dried, producing a completely cracked look. Just after it happened I grabbed the tank ran to the sink and dumped simple green on it to see if I could clean off the frosting. It seemed to work, but there are now large black spots where all the paint is gone. I think I will just weather the damn thing as if nothing happened as a way to test out techniques. I really had not planned on painting more than one of these, and I had hoped it would be a good center piece for the army. I don't play apocalypse so this was not going to be a gaming piece.
New ONI rating for testors dullcoat: NO AQUILLAS!
Friday, November 6, 2009
Testors Dullcote and Vallejo Paints
So a wonderful package arrived today, 4 cans of Dullcote and a whole slew of Vallejo Model Color paints. So far I am thrilled by the dullcote. It is not perfect, but it did take the shine off of my Plague Bearer, so it receives an ONI rating of 3 out of 5 aquillas! I have not experimented much with the paints, but so far I love earth tone colors.
So if playing with new paint were not enough, I built a shadowsword. Yep, that is it. I finally built the damn thing. It is sitting right now in my airbrush box with its black coat of primer. I am really excited to paint it up, though I am deviating from my white primer preference. I am not sure if I should paint it up to match my other tanks posted here, or go with a Voystroyan theme, or go with something totally different like warlock purple.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Servitors
Servitors are 40k to me. They represent the dehumanization of the 40k dystopia perfectly. The horror of people being lobotomized and turned into meat robots is terrifying. I suppose it is just another form of social recycling. I speed painted these guys again.
I am not sure why I am speed painting so much these days, but it might just be a way to practice. I am out of practice using black primer. I really think grey primer or white primer is the way to go. The way paint flows over the black primer is much nicer given the smoother surface, but working with details is much more difficult.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Inquisitor and Daemons
I did a few more washes on the Plague Daemons, and while waiting for them to dry painted up an inquisitor I have had lying around for some time. I added a few colors from my IG army to help him blend in. I am not sure about the green, but he does not look out of place next to one of my platoons. I have a bowl of soapy water soaking one of the Hector Rexx kits from forge world, so maybe this guy will end up an an Inquisitional henchman. I know I have said it before, but I really do not like working with metal after handling the FW resin first hand. At some point I am going to have to paint some of it up, rather than simply hoarding it until my skills are better!
Purity Seal Gone Wrong
I have based my Imperial Guard Vets and am not totally out of good bases. The base production line I setup a year ago probably spurred me on t paint more because I did not have to worry about the last finishing part of the model. There is one step that is not complete for these guys and a bunch of the blood angels I have recently done. Transfers. The thing about transfers is that they add so much visual look, but they require a matte coat of purity seal at the end, both to hold them on, and to remove the gloss finish they impart. My purity seal appears to leave a gloss coat. Last week I tried the new can out on one of my chimera's and I assumed it was the weathering powders that had interfered with the seal. However, having just sealed a batch of Plague Bringers. All this talk of Nurgle led me to order some from GW--the even arrived in two days! As you can see from the photo, the purity seal added a slight gloss to the miniatures, which ruins their appearance. Most of the shading is now lost. Should I just buy another can and try again? What is it that causes the seal to gloss up like this? Am I using too much purity seal? I might have to go on a purity seal hiatus, since everything I spray ends up frosted or shiny!
Friday, October 30, 2009
Speed Painting
All of this weathering must come to an end! I took a break from weathering my vehicles into the hands of nurgle, and instead painted an IG Vet squad. My goal was to paint quickly without any worries. I will probably use the squad as part of my new DH army.
There is something really satisfying painting at light speed.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
That Weathering Feeling...
I enjoyed a happy hour with colleagues a mojito, and then came home and weathered a tank. I don't know what it is about this process that is so cool to me. This time I took a lot of tamiya acrylic and mixed it with a very small amount of red dust from forge world. I took the rust wash and then put it around each bolt, crease or area that I thought would rust. It looked pretty rough initially, but I am happy with it now. One of the things I am trying to learn is when to stop weathering a vehicle. This poor artillery piece looks like it hasn't seen the inside of a shop since its production line. The problem with weathering this way is that it is pretty easy to make something look derelict like this, but much more difficult to paint up a tank that is well maintained but weathered. Weathering adds so much texture it is amazing, but I think it lends itself most easily to renegade forces. One more change from my weathering routine, I brushed light earth colored weathering powered all over the vehicle simulating dust.
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