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Author Topic: Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step  (Read 1253 times)

Offline antimatter

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 240
Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step
« on: July 23, 2016, 06:59:51 PM »
Hi folks,

Here is an abbreviated step-by-step guide for the Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer, a summoner of foul entities of the void. The model was painted with the glaze style, starting with a white primer coat. The first base layers were very light, doing using mainly thinned paint or inks.

The carapace was painted with Golden Fluid Acrylics Indian Yellow mixed with some Reaper Golden highlight, as was the front trim of the robes and the eye on the hand. The tentacles were glazed with Cerulean Blue ink (all inks used are by Liquitex). The ethereal eruption coming from the side was glazed with Magenta Ink + a touch of Cerulean blue and white paint. The inner robes were glazed with Dioxazene Purple ink + white, while the metal belt and buckle were painted with Bronze ink. The "shirt" was painted with thinned English Ivy Green (Americana acrylics) while the sleeves were painted with a grayish mixture of blue, purple green and black paint. The hands were done with a thinned blue-gray mixture (Cerulean Blue ink, white & black paint). The crystals hanging from the belt were painted with Deep Turquoise Ink. Finally, the staff was painted with Reaper Golden Highlight and the top statue was glazed with Sap Green ink + black paint + white paint to make a bit of a jade appearance.



The next step was to shade down everything. The blue tentacles were washed with Phthalo Blue ink mixed with some black paint.  When dry, the tentacles on the face were glazed with a bit of Magenta ink under the faceplate. The "sprouting" tentacles were washed with Phthalo Blue ink, then when dry, with some Dioxazene Purple ink. The carapace was given a thick, gloppy wash of Burnt Sienna ink + Matte Medium, then when dry, it was washed with Phthalo Blue ink and Matte Medium. The goal was to have t pool in all of the recesses smoothly. The staff was washed with Burnt Umber ink, as was the golden trim of the robes in front. The robes were washed with thinned black paint + Burnt Umber ink. The eye on the hand was washed with Burnt Sienna ink to make a the orange rim. The Metal was washed with Burnt Sienna ink + Black paint.




Now comes the long step. The washes and glazed needed to dry completely before starting the highlights. most highlights use opaque paint, or semi-opaque mixtures of paint and ink. The Carapace and front robe trim was highlighted with Reaper Golden Highlight + White paint, with final highlights of pure white on hotspots where the light would be striking from above. Some Sap Green ink was glazes on the patches of barnacles and algae on the carapace, then the edges of the barnacles were highlighted in white. The staff was drybrushed with Golden Highlight + white paint, then glazed down a bit with more Burnt Sienna ink and a bit of Sap Green here and there.

 Each blue tentacle was highlighted with white paint, mixed with a small amount of Magenta Ink. The tips of the blue tentacles also got a touch of Megenta to vary the color tone. To do the highlights, the tip of a small brush was used to paint lines along the tentacles, giving them more definition, then the suckers were highlighted. Small line reflections were painted from the tip to further back each tentacle also.

The "sprouting" tentacles were highlighted with White paint + Megenta Ink, up to pure white, with some blending done with multiple layers of thinned paint. The inside of the mouths were glazed with dark red paint (red + black) to add contrast. The skin on the hands was highlighted with blue-gray paint + more white on edges. They eye was painted like a gem with lighter yellow + white paint on the bottom and darker orange-red on the top. A small vertical pupil was added, the a large reflection hotspot near the top with pure white paint.

The robes were drybrushed with Golden Highlight + White paint, then glazed with Purple and Green ink to add some more color tone. Edge highlights on the robes were done with pure white to make them stand out. The metal was highlighted with a bit of silver + gold paint.

The crystals took a bit of blending to complete, using Turquoise Ink mixed with white to make the gradients. Edges were painted in pure white. To show that they are glowing crystals, the area around them was drybrushed with some the the Turquoise/white mixture (staff, robes, trim, belt, arm, fingers). The statue on the staff, which was highlighted Sap Green + Gray + white, up to pure white.

to finish it off, the Base was done with a quick method. The rocky parts (no coral) was given a wash of Pthalo Blue ink and allowed to dry. The coral was washed with Burnt Sienna Ink and allowed to dry. The rock and coral were drybrushed with Golden Highlight + White paint. When dry, the coral was glazed with a touch more Burnt Sienna ink while the rock was glazed with Sap Green, Burnt Umber and Dioxazene Purple inks. Some white dots were added as final highlights on the rock.








« Last Edit: July 23, 2016, 07:04:41 PM by antimatter »
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Offline Hobby Services

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 2070
Re: Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step
« Reply #1 on: July 23, 2016, 07:35:14 PM »
Nice work, very crisp highlights there.  The excellent Bob Olley sculpt helps, doesn't it?  :)

Offline affun

  • Mad Scientist
  • Posts: 616
    • North of Nowhere [Under construction]
Re: Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2016, 07:56:45 PM »
Thanks for posting these step by steps - Really learned a lot reading through the previous one, and its nice to see a painting technique like this executed so well. Been shifting my own painting over to primarily using glazing and tinting lately.

... also kinda makes me want to get some of those cephalids  :D

Offline antimatter

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 240
Re: Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step
« Reply #3 on: July 24, 2016, 12:53:41 AM »
Nice work, very crisp highlights there.  The excellent Bob Olley sculpt helps, doesn't it?  :)

Yes, Bob has an amazing ability with textures and small details. It makes it really easy to paint them using the glaze techniques.

Offline Braxandur

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1139
Re: Dark Mariner Cephalid Ethermancer - step by step
« Reply #4 on: July 24, 2016, 11:50:03 AM »
Again very nice work and thank you for the write up. I do sometimes play a bit with glazes/washes and your results show that I'll need to keep trying more as the results are so nice!

The model is also great; I would not mind having one for my chaos army (for whatever system) and like details such as the cthulhu shaped staff top.
Why aim for gold if you can get lead?


 

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