Well, yes if you want it to look like chrome that's what you end up with. SENMM is the way to go. Everything else will have a more matte, used look.I think what you are describing is SENMM done on gold. Or maybe I am misunderstanding how you mean.
Well, yes if you want it to look like chrome that's what you end up with. SENMM is the way to go. Everything else will have a more matte, used look.
Blood father I've looked long and hard at the pictures you've put up and to be honest they aren't working as NMM.
Getting NMM to work requires a number of factors to be considered, firstly and you may not like to read this but neatness and accuracy of brush placement are paramount. I'm seeing several overruns where you've taken the base colour onto the Blue.
Next is to do with observation and placement of shadow, reflection and light. One of those "Eureka" moments for me and NMM was seeing a cars name in chrome in bright sunlight and getting how light plays on shapes.
NMM is not just about how paint mixes but about how paint is used as glazes to tone the underlying paint and change it's colour. To help understand look at something metallic, I've used the example of a wedding ring before so I'll use it again. It's a curved surface which to all intents and purposes is one base colour, what we see in the variations is not the gold changing colour as it curves but the changes in light reflection and reflection of the surrounding skin and materials culminating in lighter (and smaller) points where the light is reflected most brightly. This gets referred to as "Flare".
So to go back to painting we have to get the underlying base colour right, then look to placing initial highlight to get to place shadow toning to help give the light reflection a structure. Once the initial structure has a shape we can the build up the highlights to the flare point.
Now for me to get NMM 'right' I use thinned paints with minute gradual introductions of VMC Ivory for yellow based metals and VAC White for Grey/Blue metals, not 1,2,3 steps but sometimes 1-15 stages of colour change.
Since NMM is really about a visual interpretation (an illusion) just like a stage magician it has to be smooth and seamless so that our minds see the representation and interpret it as metal.