Bailey03
Well-known member
Yeah, the Scale75 black/white paint set is a good place to start. There's also the Andrea white paint set. Here's an image I grabbed from the web, I wouldn't call any of these paints grey
Pale browns, creams, and bone colors are good places to start. Put some thought into what material you're painting. With historical figures I do a lot of white cloth. It's natural fibers, so brown shades make sense to me. If you're doing something modern or futuristic, then grey can be appropriate. That's what I used on the goalie
So it's not that you can't use grey, it works here but I don't think this would like right for the knight. Of course, if you're doing something futuristic or magical, no reason it can't go into the blues, purples, or greens for the shadows. Unless you had a strong reason I'd avoid red as that can make things look pink real quick. If you don't have pale versions of the color you want, try mixing a bit of the pure shade with a light grey to tint it.
What we see as white (or black) is relative. I'm not sure if I have any pure white on the knight and yet it looks white. As long as it's the lightest color (and close enough to white) it will appear white to our eyes. It's the same in real life, that t-shirt or pair of sneakers might look white. But put them next to a sheet of white printer paper and all of a sudden you can tell it's off white.
Pale browns, creams, and bone colors are good places to start. Put some thought into what material you're painting. With historical figures I do a lot of white cloth. It's natural fibers, so brown shades make sense to me. If you're doing something modern or futuristic, then grey can be appropriate. That's what I used on the goalie
So it's not that you can't use grey, it works here but I don't think this would like right for the knight. Of course, if you're doing something futuristic or magical, no reason it can't go into the blues, purples, or greens for the shadows. Unless you had a strong reason I'd avoid red as that can make things look pink real quick. If you don't have pale versions of the color you want, try mixing a bit of the pure shade with a light grey to tint it.
What we see as white (or black) is relative. I'm not sure if I have any pure white on the knight and yet it looks white. As long as it's the lightest color (and close enough to white) it will appear white to our eyes. It's the same in real life, that t-shirt or pair of sneakers might look white. But put them next to a sheet of white printer paper and all of a sudden you can tell it's off white.