thevintagearena
New member
Hi everyone,
I’ve been experimenting with painting miniatures that look a bit more worn‑in and ‘lived‑in’ instead of always going for super clean, shiny finishes. Things like faded cloth, scuffed leather and slightly distressed armour feel more realistic to me, but I’m still figuring out the best way to achieve that without everything just looking messy.
Right now I’m playing around with thin glazes, controlled drybrushing and a bit of sponge weathering, but I’d really appreciate any tips, recipe breakdowns or good tutorials you recommend. I’m especially interested in how people handle muted, vintage‑style colour palettes.
Outside of painting, I run The Vintage Arena Official Store as a side project, so I’m probably over‑influenced by old fabrics and worn textures in real life too. If you have examples of minis you’ve painted with a more aged, realistic look, I’d love to see them and learn how you approached it.
I’ve been experimenting with painting miniatures that look a bit more worn‑in and ‘lived‑in’ instead of always going for super clean, shiny finishes. Things like faded cloth, scuffed leather and slightly distressed armour feel more realistic to me, but I’m still figuring out the best way to achieve that without everything just looking messy.
Right now I’m playing around with thin glazes, controlled drybrushing and a bit of sponge weathering, but I’d really appreciate any tips, recipe breakdowns or good tutorials you recommend. I’m especially interested in how people handle muted, vintage‑style colour palettes.
Outside of painting, I run The Vintage Arena Official Store as a side project, so I’m probably over‑influenced by old fabrics and worn textures in real life too. If you have examples of minis you’ve painted with a more aged, realistic look, I’d love to see them and learn how you approached it.