Demi your painting has really jumped up over the last few minis :good:
Thanks 10! You're doing pretty good too
Seriously though, I am constantly trying to improve. Brush control, paint control, color theory, composition, and speed are things I am constantly trying to push myself on.
Last fall I took an airbrushing workshop with Mr. Justin of Secret Weapon and we talked a lot about painting with transparent colors. Of course that is the idea behind glazing, but seeing some of the transparent artist inks, particularly the Daler Rowney inks, shot through the airbrush, where you can do 80 layers in like 30 seconds, really brought it home to me how to manipulate my blends a little better and a little more predictably by thinning my paint a little better. I mentioned the Matte Medium in my previous post and should point out that painting with inks, instead of just splashing them into cracks, can produce nice results.
Another thing that has really helped me, has been to get a couple of solid paint recipes in my head. Something that I like about painting, and all creative endeavors I suppose, is how you get to experiment as you go along. Experimenting is fun for sure, but when you first start out that is all you do. It's nice to have a couple of recipes and techniques that give consistent results. Bailey's neutral grey quintet from his blog post on painting white (
http://powellminipainting.blogspot.com/p/painting-white.html) has been especially useful because it's easy to tweak with transparent colors.
One other thing I am doing a lot more that goes along with have predictability and consistency is planning out a paint job from beginning to end before I start painting. So that by the time I primer, I have the base all done and my color scheme picked out. It makes thing go faster and I don't end up in as many cul de sacs.
Okay, here is the second head basically done on the reptosaurs:
Got all the skin done on the third guy as well just need to finish his face then I can start on the NMM, which I am looking forward to. Lot's of nice regular surfaces for the nmm, no compound curves or convexities
