Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => Future Wars => Topic started by: The_Beast on June 27, 2015, 01:17:15 PM
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Okay, so a friend is planning on doing some painting of his, and with the double-effect sale at GZG this weekend, I figure I'll try and pick up some as well.
However, most of the tutorials I'm finding on spaceships are for craft with mostly flat spaces broken up with scribe lines and a few greebles. Anybody got tips for beasts that are MOSTLY greebles?
My own tastes are for crisp details, with a surface that's not shiny, but a satin that's almost almost semi-gloss.
Pointers? Tutorials I've missed? Give up on what I said if I want big, honking death machines on my table?
Doug
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Dry brushing maybe? Base colour and a few slightly lighter tones finished with a pure white one to give definition.
Before the white you can add a few colours for ID purposes, etc.
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Okay, so a friend is planning on doing some painting of his, and with the double-effect sale at GZG this weekend, I figure I'll try and pick up some as well.
However, most of the tutorials I'm finding on spaceships are for craft with mostly flat spaces broken up with scribe lines and a few greebles. Anybody got tips for beasts that are MOSTLY greebles?
My own tastes are for crisp details, with a surface that's not shiny, but a satin that's almost almost semi-gloss.
Pointers? Tutorials I've missed? Give up on what I said if I want big, honking death machines on my table?
Doug
Doug,
what works for me is a boneheaded practical solution of either (A) flat black primer coat then drybrushing up two or three shades of the same overall base hull color (ie., dark charcoal grey, then neutral grey, then a slate grey, etc.) or (B, for bright overall hull colors) a white primer base followed by an overall undercoating of a median shade of the base hull color, then a paint wash of the darker shading tone, then drybrushing again once the wash has dried fully with the median tone and a lighter highlighting tone as necessary.
At least that tends to work for me, as I tend to paint whole squadrons at a time:
(http://www.metal-express.net/wp-content/gallery/kagetora/cimg1939.jpg)
(http://www.metal-express.net/wp-content/gallery/kagetora/cimg1966.jpg)
(http://www.metal-express.net/wp-content/gallery/kagetora/cimg2579.jpg)
(http://www.metal-express.net/wp-content/gallery/kagetora/CIMG6163.JPG)
(http://www.metal-express.net/wp-content/gallery/kagetora/CIMG6197.JPG)
(http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-PCzqPi1ZG2I/VKR-GPhz6jI/AAAAAAAACKQ/byXuiJiRf4g/s1600/CIMG6680.JPG)
(http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-X3VwIk56Isw/VKSAZsS1kDI/AAAAAAAACKk/LZ_x016VZ00/s1600/CIMG6621.JPG)
Hope this helps! 8)
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Got a step by step of these on my blog:
(http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-prSTw6kqI5E/UROgoNIEpYI/AAAAAAAAAU0/htpNhxjlkQ0/s1600/ft_intro_fleets_04.jpg)
Blog link:
http://carpetgeneral.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/finished-ft-intro-fleets.html (http://carpetgeneral.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/finished-ft-intro-fleets.html)
Hope they are of use?
Regards
Geoff
Aka CG
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Thanks all!
@Leland, you know I'd be willing to hide in the bushes outside your house any night to drygulch you for your ships, hound of hell or no, but your PJ's doesn't quite fit the newer GZG sculpts to my thinking. Have to admit, though, the Stardate 3000 stuff argues in your favor.
@Carpet General Have yet to dig into the tutorial, but those piccies are STUNNING. Thanks!
Doug