Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => The Conflicts that came in from the Cold => Topic started by: Blofeld on 17 August 2016, 08:43:12 AM
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Has anyone got any easy techniques for painting camo? I've got no hand eye coordination whatsoever and my few attempts at just painting on camo have gone pretty badly so I was wondering if the lead adventure hive mind had any camo painting hacks?
Thanks
Blofeld
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A good paintingservice??? Ok, Mick from Switzerland made a good tutorial here. And Stone-Cold-lead has some good ideas on his website. He uses wooden sticks (teethsticks). On the warlordgames website is also some tutorials for camo (SS-Camo), that helps.
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PaintingWar is a great resource
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My own exploits have been mostly dotting on colours and not bothering to much about accuracy or the size of the dots. Then giving the whole thing a wash to tie it together. It works for me. Here I have been trying to hit the danish variant of the Flecktarn.
(http://i157.photobucket.com/albums/t75/Fredejensen/null_zpsda6e8277.jpg) (http://s157.photobucket.com/user/Fredejensen/media/null_zpsda6e8277.jpg.html)
I have seen others achieve great results by sponging on the camo colours. It works great for immitating more modern digital camo.
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Tutorial is at the bottom of page 1 here :D
http://leadadventureforum.com/index.php?topic=64486.0
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I painted my Marpat in a rather simple fashing doing straight lines horizontally and vertically on the uniform. Worked out rather nicely and from a distance it looks quite convincing. Close ups not so much :) Personally I think the trick to camo is exaggerating the scale of the pattern to at least 3-4 times larger than it would be in real life. It give some resemblance of the original, while still being achievable. Plus a real size pattern would with most design just look like a smudge on the miniature. And go light on the colours. If I'd go back to my USMC I'd probably do at least the base brownish shade lighter as the minis are rather dark.
(http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-o48iv16ww14/U3TkhsEpWZI/AAAAAAAAClQ/fMLLAICvciQ/s1600/IMG_1197.jpg)
Also check out pictures of what the camo looks like on real troops when they are more than a few meters away. That's what you really want to achieve on your minis. It's all fine trying to copy a close up picture of the pattern, but really on someone 10 meters away the design will be very blurred out especially on some of the modern digital camos.
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-rijvsyS6nNs/U3TcML6C3NI/AAAAAAAACkw/2LRMZ6Mme6A/s1600/USMC-woodland-camo.jpg)
I also wrote a tutorial on how I painted them a few years back. Might be helpful. It can be found here: http://engineered-gaming.blogspot.fi/2014/05/tutorial-usmc-in-woodland-marpat.html (http://engineered-gaming.blogspot.fi/2014/05/tutorial-usmc-in-woodland-marpat.html)
The Vallejo Orange Ochre that I used as the base colour is a close match to the original, but on the miniature I recommend taking a bit lighter one, especially if you'll apply a wash later.
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Very nice...and thanks for the tutorials!
Mike Demana
www.firstcommandwargames.com
http://leadlegionaries.blogspot.com/
(http://i721.photobucket.com/albums/ww213/mikedemana/Miscellaneous/LPL_bades_zpsl7op2jaz.jpg)