Logga in

Visar inlägg med etiketten “vallejo”

Painting rubble – Progress on the Ruined Coaching Inn

Av Per postad i Mordheim | 25 oktober, 2011 | 1 kommentar

This will unfortunately be a pretty short post because I need some sleep soon. But here goes!

Priming with black AND white spray

For the first time in years I did something new with my priming. I tried the prime 2k technique best explained by Roman at Massive Voodoo. The short version of it is, spray the model with black primer. Let it dry. Spray a little bit with white primer. And then you have something like this:

Black in the nooks and crannies and white on the top surfaces is what I was aiming for.

Painting bricks

  • Start with 50/50 Vallejo Terracotta and GW Macharius Solar Orange.
  • Mix in some Vallejo Iraqi Sand or similar (like GW Bleached Bone) in the base color and add a highlight or two on the edges of the bricks.
  • Wash the bricks with Vallejo Sepia Shade, mostly at the sides where they connect to the ground.
  • More layers of wash – GW Gryphonne Sepia this time and add it all over the bricks but try to avoid painting over the highlights.
  • Optional: Devlan Mud and Badab Black to give the bricks a more weathered look.

Off topic – Repainted the wood

I wasn‘t happy with the wood and the stone walls so I worked a lot on them to give them a bit more contrast between each other so that they don’t blend into one big grey/brown wall. It‘s not perfect but it’s a lot better than before.

With flash.

Without flash.

Etiketter: bricks, vallejo, wood, stone, mordheim, citadel, painting, games workshop, priming, ruined coaching inn


The Citadel Fortified Manor Painting Guide Part III

Av Per postad i Mordheim | 27 maj, 2010 | 7 kommentarer

This guide is taking awfully long to complete but I‘ve come one step closer to a finished building and I thought I’d share my progress.

Repainting everything black

When I did my previous step of drybrushing on this building I got it all over the place because I drybrush pretty hard. So I needed to paint black on all areas that shouldn't have been brushed in the first place. This was very boring but in the end it will save me a lot of time and make the rest of the model more fun to paint.

Drybrushing stone

After I had done the ground work with the black, it was a sweet deal to drybrush the stone parts of the building. I started with Charadon Granite and then Dheneb Stone. Both Citadel Foundation colors. And both a bit warmer in color than Adaptus Battlegrey and Astronomican Grey. I also base coated the bricks with Scorched Brown.

How-to paint tarnished copper

I made the questionable decision to ask Totte for his opinion on how I should paint the doors and he came up with the great idea that they could be copper plated doors.
I thought, well why not, and started looking for a reference picture which you can see part of below.

Tarnished copper isn't that copperish

As you can see for yourself, old copper plated doors don‘t have that copperish feel to them. They’re actually mostly turquoise and not that shiny. So I decided that I would only use copper and brass colors for small areas of the doors and decided to base coat the doors with a blend of Vallejo Grey Green and Vallejo Falcon Turquoise. Probably a 50/50 blend, don't really remember exactly.

I then added black to my mixed color and darkened the lower parts of the door with normal drybrushing technique, checking the reference picture for guidance along the way.

The door on the right shows the door after a base coat and the door on the left the first step of added wear and tear.

I continued with a mix of Vallejo Brassy Brass(the Hammered Copper is too red in my opinion), Green Grey and Black (can't remember if I also had some Turquoise in the mix…) – drybrushing it on carefully and again, looking at the reference picture for guidance.

Vallejo Grey Green, Vallejo Falcon Turquoise, Vallejo Brassy Brass.

Highlighting the doors

I used a mix of my base coat with more of the Falcon Turquoise and drybrushed it on in streaks along the door. Mostly on the upper parts. I added Vallejo Electric Blue to make it brighter and more saturated. For the last layer I added a bit of Vallejo Sky Blue for an even brighter color.

The tarnished copper doors completed

This is the final result(except that the hinges needs a wash). I must say I‘m pleased with my first attempt at creating this effect. I would love to see if any of you readers have painted any tarnished copper and how you’ve done it, please comment as always. And if you think my effort looks like shit, please do tell ;)

Shot in daylight.

Shot with artificial light.

Previous parts of this guide can be found here:

STEP 2: The Citadel Fortified Manor Painting Guide Part II
STEP 1: Oh my, that's a very yellow house

Etiketter: scenery, drybrush, doors, tarnished copper, vallejo, fortified manor, mordheim, citadel


The Citadel Fortified Manor Painting Guide Part II

Av Per postad i Mordheim | 17 mars, 2010 | 2 kommentarer

This is how it looked when I started.

You can find the first part of this guide filed under Oh my, that's a very yellow house.

From Yellow to Crème Caramel

A very simple step. All you need is a lot of wash. I use Vallejo‘s washes for buildings because it is so much cheaper than Citadel’s. On Relish Models it costs approximately 6€. If I would buy seventeen Citadel washes (which would be the same amount as in the big Vallejo wash) it would add up to 60€! GW sure knows how to squeeze the last little pennies out of their minions.

Grab your brush and start washing

It will probably never get more uncomplicated to paint than this. Dip your brush and paint over all the Iyanden Darksun areas. Try to put more wash around window edges for example, but the wash will probably end up in those places anyway. After you‘re done it needs to dry for quite some time. At least if you use Vallejo washes, they take a lot longer to dry than Citadel’s.
The result will look a bit like Crème Caramel …

When it's dry – drybrush

Take out your big ugly looking drybrush and load it up with a sand color. I use Vallejo Iraqui Sand on this building but it will work with any pale sand color.

Remove the excess paint by brushing it off on tissue paper. You will need more paint left on the brush if you compare to how much you would leave on for drybrushing armor on a small miniature. Here we still need some paint to cover a lot of the “Caramel” so don't brush all of it off on the paper.

Drybrush on more and more sand color while doing random motions with your wrist and you will end up with something like this:

A closeup of the result from the drybrushing.

I hope to see you back for Part III.

Etiketter: scenery, drybrush, vallejo, fortified manor, mordheim, citadel, wash


First step painting my Mordheim gang

Av Per postad i Mordheim | 12 november, 2009 | 0 kommentarer

So… me and Totte has started another stupid project – Mordheim. I’ve bought a bunch of stuff needed to play, maybe a bit more than needed. Anyway, I’m going to blog about the progress.

A short painting how-to

These are the first models I've painted for many years and this is the first step towards getting them finished. I thought I would try to share the process I use when painting in a couple of easy steps.

1. Putting on the primer

Begin with spraying the model with a coat of black primer. I use the black from Games Workshop but any good matt primer would work fine. Just keep the layer thin, preferably spraying on multiple thin layers instead of a thick one.

2. Basic colors

When primed I start painting all areas of the model with basic colors. Begin from the inside (often the face) and work your way out. You can use the foundation colors from Citadel in this step because they cover up nicely. But I actually used colors from Vallejo. Thanks Totte for letting me use your paints.

3. Washing

Now for the easy and lovely part. Drench the model with a Citadel Wash. I use Devlan Mud most of the time but others can be nice too, like Badab Black for armor.

Be generous when applying the wash otherwise you will not see much of a result.

4. Highlighting

Begin highlighting all obvious edges. You could probably do this before and after the Wash for an even better result.

That’s all I’ve done with the models so far and I think they look pretty decent so far. What do you think?

Etiketter: empire, vallejo, how-to, citadel, painting


Follow Marvelous Miniatures

Arkiv

2011

2010

2009

Blogroll

My Delicious bookmarks

My profile