Blimey, you've raced through those! Looking great though!
Once our grandsons saw them on the work desk I had to get a move on. That said, I use a fairly quick painting method that gives a decent effect from a distance but not so good close up.
using the Bossonians as an example:
Stand the figures in ranks on the work surface with each rank having a few halberdiers an archer and an axeman
Set aside the colours common to all figures - metals for chain mail, plate, leather, arrows, flesh etc.
Select the main tunic colour for each rank and stand the pot at the end of the rank.
Select the wash colours for the flesh and uniforms
Block in all the main colours by rank,
Paint the details by rank - lips, hair, belts, quivers, weapons etc
Wash the flesh tones with brown
Wash the figure with darker brown or black (avoiding the flesh areas)
Drybrush
Draw in eyes with a pen
Varnish
Characters get a similar but more individual treatment.
On monsters and creatures I select a few colours and quite often work "wet in wet" on the model to get the effect I want - or get surprised by an effect and keep it (Happy Accident).
That way the boys and I get our figures on the wargame table very quickly. Our objective is to play the game not produce works of art.