Article: Glowing Eyes by Cyril

khaibar igor

New member
J'ai éssayé, ta technique pour les yeux mais n'est pas Mr Cyril qui veut... il y aura bientôt des photos et tu verras qu'il ya encore du boulot... Mais bon comme d'hab un tuto de Cyril, c'est un tuto de Cyril, du vrai pas à pas et qui te donne l'impression que c'est super simple. Donc 10/10
 

Turelio

New member
This is incredible. I love the effect around the eyes, but i also love the damage on the helmet, plus an new way to do white (compared to what i have seen). This article is great. There are so many useful ideas and techniques in here.
 

Nelson

New member
Amazing article, quite inspiring, but also quite frustrating...his work goes from a few rough washes, a bit rough, to god-like in one picture on page 2. :(
 

lumpy

New member
Excellent article, very precise and well presented. It's a great effect that I'm probably going to try sometime soon. Thanks!
 

Astonia

New member
omg those scratches are PAINTED??! I thought you had scratched the actual model before painting it...
 

Calavera

New member
Beautiful helmet ! And a great tutorial, I've been trying out painting scratches like you do but it's nowhere near your quality ! Thanks for the article and thanks to alexgrunt for translation :)

Setting aside a helmet to try to replicate this one :)
 

subversive

New member
Although it looks cool, I don't feel this technique gives a realistic look. The eyes in the helmet are recessed. Therefore, a glow eminating from them would actually cast the raised plates around them in shadow, not reflect light onto them. Think about it this way: turn on a flashlight. Is the outside of the flashlight lit up by the bulb? It's a more extreme example, but it's the same principle.

The rest is absolutely amazing, though.
 

Micha

Member
fantastic work, thank you very much for this insight into your work; you´re atrue master and it´s a shame I didn´t have the opportunity to meet you at the German GD. micha
 
10 bien sur ca c est un véritable article de peinture, trés bien fait, ca m a bcp appris et c est d ailleurs avec cet article que j ai réalisé le casque du space marine de mon dio !!! et donc juste pour ca, Merci Cyril...
 

tagron

New member
Ive seen ALLOT of techniques and most of them i will just look over and go "ok i see what they are doing, i bet i could have figured that out if id looked at the model long enough" or i might say "yeah ive done that before just not in that way" But this is compleatlly beyond anything ive ever done or seen, how the heck did you ever come up with that? Amazing
 

Eimerich

New member
I've always liked the way you paint your models (the examples here and on the net are several), but when I read that you have spent about 45min on the single helmet, I've understand why your minis looks so "real". Excellent and inspiranting. Thanks for sharing this technique.
 

Mengu

New member
I would never have guessed the scratches were painted by looking at it. The glowing eyes are indeed very eye catchy (no pun intended). Not to be confused with source lighting, this effect is more of ambient lighting. Imagine a focused light shining through a small hole. There will be a dark area immediately around the light, but then there will be a lit circle around that dark area. I believe this is what's simulated. Perhaps not true to physics, but we never are when painting miniatures. I like this stylized effect.
 
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