Saturday 14 December 2013

Beastmen: Shaman and Command group

Decided to take a break from painting Gor to do the command group and shaman.

Command group was relatively straight forward. Did some green stuffing of the banner not a 100% happy with the blood effect but decided it was good enough for a first attempt rather than keep trying to get it right and making it worse.



For the Shaman I decided to add a touch of white as it will make the characters stand out a bit and also I wanted to practised painting white.

I am happy I managed to get it streak free and kept a bit of shading around the joints not so happy with just how many layers it took. I started black and stepped up through grey before painting white but I towards the light grey I was just using too many layers I think I tried to take too big a jump up.
Next time I will  try and do the grey in more gradual increments.


Monday 9 December 2013

Beastmen

So we have started a local escalation league, the idea is you start building and painting a 500 point army, then add to it to make it up to 1000, then 1500 etc.

I have used this as an excuse to finally take the plunge and do another WHF army and for my sins I chose beastmen.

So my first 500 points :

Bray Shaman - Staff of Daroth,  Lore of Beasts

25 Gor - Standard, Musician, Additional Hand Weapons

Tuskgor Chariot
Tuskgor Chariot

I went with the big block of Gor as it gets me through a big chunk of the painting. the level 1 with staff so he has a good magic missile to chuck out and when they get in combat wildform FTW!

And the chariots are chaff killers and at only 500 points there shouldn't be much I can't chuck two chariots into and not make a mess.

For the paint scheme I didn't want to go with the usual brown and after having a dose of common sense and deciding to not do them white I went with purple. I want them to stand out and look evil and chaotic. Since the paint scheme is so loud I went with a subdued look for the base, some mud, snow and weathering powers.




Tuesday 20 August 2013

Painting Germans (Part 1)

 
I decided to do a quick and dirty guide to painting Germans. Part 1 will cover off the painting, part 2 the basing.

So here's what I am going to be painting up, some 88's already undercoated black. We will start with the guns, they are going to be done in pea dot cammo with a white wash.






 So first up it's base colour time.




 I am a big fan of he GW bases, they go on well and save a lot of time. Since we are putting yellow on it's going to take a few coats to get reasonable coverage.
 It doesn't have too be perfect at this stage as there are more layers to go.
 
 Next up is middle stone yellow, I am using this as the main colour. Again requires a few layers but don't worry too much about getting coverage too even.
 

Next up it's wash time.


This is straight forward enough, drown the bugger :) Anywhere there is a join or somewhere their should be shade soak it with this, neatness not required.


This needs left till it's fully dry (normally I leave it over night)





 Next up a dry brush of a few more layers of middlestone yellow.




 Then it's on to the cammo.
 


For this I used Olive Green and Flat Brown, long as your not too fussed about getting historically accurate colours and appropriate green or brown will do. First we paint some green splodges (technical term), this will probably take a couple of layers as we want this bit pretty solid.







Next we do the same with the brown.







Next I should have a picture Showing the pea dot effect where you up green dots on the brown and brown ones on the green but I forgot to take it so we will have to jump to the next stage.





Yup Marmite time (stick with me on this). Take the Marmite and paint it on the model anywhere there would be wear and tear or you just want to show off some paint from under the white wash like so.





So far so straight forward (now you can see the pea dot effect was talking about). Next spray it white.





You don't want it covered solid. Ideally you want to be just able to see the layer of paint below. Then comes the clever bit, take an old tooth brush and gentle rub off the Marmite.

 Instant worn white wash effect :)Next up I do the carriages, a bit of metal on the cables and paint the lights just to add a bit more colour.
 





Then it's time to paint the crew. I made a slight mistake by gluing them on the base before doing the gun. After the spraying the paint is a tad thicker on them than I would like.

 Shockingly enough we start with German Grey.


You should probably use a different Gray for the jackets, but I forgot to order it and just stuck with what I had. again depends how historically accurate your going for.
 
 Bit of Green-Grey on the webbing.
 






 Next up some Gunmetal on shells and other appropriate bits.






For hands and faces I dip into my precious supply of Dheneb Stone but any off white cream style colour will do.










 Next some good old fashion white for shirts and anyone in winter cammo.


Bit of German Grey on the helmets.
 
 



Black for the boots.




At this point I feel they are looking a bit too blocky since the trousers, jacket and hat are all the same grey so it's time to mix some paint.






I cut the German Grey with some white and paint the helmets with that colour.





Then it's on to some more washes, first I use the old GW Ogran Flesh on the hands and face as I love the skin effect it gives with the Dheneb Stone.


Then I break out the Agrax Earthshade and paint the rest of the model with it.


And there we go all painted, In part 2 doing the bases.