jamsessionein
Member
Alright, so I just want to bring this up to speed.
I felt like finishing Booma\'s modelling over the past few days, so I went about doing just that with my free time. I started painting him this morning.
A couple key changes include a modified backpack unit...
And a handy-dandy cy-grot to help wave Booma\'s bosspole around in any uppity ork\'s face.
This morning, I worked a bit on cleaning my Big Mek up before priming this morning, primarily greenstuffing closed any gaps or seams on the model and giving the banner waver a bionic eye.
As far as priming goes, I\'ve been experimenting a little bit recently with white instead of black. The reason for this is that I\'ve just started to get the hang of washes, now that the new Citadel ones are out, and I\'ve discovered that layering on thin washes of darker colors over white primer does a really nice job with ork skin. Additionally, I\'ve decided to skip trying any NMM shenanigans with this model - as much as I would love to have him up to presentation standards like that, Booma\'s primarily a model for me to play with, and my previous attempts at NMM have been below average. However, metallics look a bit poor over white primer, meaning I needed a black undercoat for the detail parts.
I set out this morning with a can of black and white primer and had at the model. I\'ve left the parts mostly separate on the model, so I can pull them off, prime them, and paint them with ease. What I basically did this morning was spray items like the backpack and grot\'s robotic arm down with black primer, while doing the rest up in white. After priming white, I grabbed a brush, thinned out some black paint, and started blacking in the darker parts of the model so I would have a suitable undercoat...
Since priming, I\'ve devoted most of my efforts to his head and face just to try and get the skintones approximately right. This is basically just thinned down Vallejo Dark Green, applied in three coats, followed by a little wash of the Citadel Thraka Green. I\'m pretty happy with the way his skin looks.
The one big lens is giving me a bit of trouble because I am trying to get a smooth gradient from dark blue to light and it\'s a bit... evasive. It\'s not as exaggerated as I pictured when I was throwing the colors onto it - I need it to be a bit more contrasty. I\'ll probably try it again. Other than that, I like how he looks, so I\'m going to get a start on painting the rest of him tomorrow.
I felt like finishing Booma\'s modelling over the past few days, so I went about doing just that with my free time. I started painting him this morning.
And a handy-dandy cy-grot to help wave Booma\'s bosspole around in any uppity ork\'s face.
This morning, I worked a bit on cleaning my Big Mek up before priming this morning, primarily greenstuffing closed any gaps or seams on the model and giving the banner waver a bionic eye.
As far as priming goes, I\'ve been experimenting a little bit recently with white instead of black. The reason for this is that I\'ve just started to get the hang of washes, now that the new Citadel ones are out, and I\'ve discovered that layering on thin washes of darker colors over white primer does a really nice job with ork skin. Additionally, I\'ve decided to skip trying any NMM shenanigans with this model - as much as I would love to have him up to presentation standards like that, Booma\'s primarily a model for me to play with, and my previous attempts at NMM have been below average. However, metallics look a bit poor over white primer, meaning I needed a black undercoat for the detail parts.
I set out this morning with a can of black and white primer and had at the model. I\'ve left the parts mostly separate on the model, so I can pull them off, prime them, and paint them with ease. What I basically did this morning was spray items like the backpack and grot\'s robotic arm down with black primer, while doing the rest up in white. After priming white, I grabbed a brush, thinned out some black paint, and started blacking in the darker parts of the model so I would have a suitable undercoat...
Since priming, I\'ve devoted most of my efforts to his head and face just to try and get the skintones approximately right. This is basically just thinned down Vallejo Dark Green, applied in three coats, followed by a little wash of the Citadel Thraka Green. I\'m pretty happy with the way his skin looks.
The one big lens is giving me a bit of trouble because I am trying to get a smooth gradient from dark blue to light and it\'s a bit... evasive. It\'s not as exaggerated as I pictured when I was throwing the colors onto it - I need it to be a bit more contrasty. I\'ll probably try it again. Other than that, I like how he looks, so I\'m going to get a start on painting the rest of him tomorrow.