New member and a few questions.

Piotr

New member
im also returning to the world of minis and its great to see such a wealth of helpful information

It is indeed a very helpful and friendly community. I am still trying to assimilate the wealth of information on the forums.

Also it's fun to put on some epic orchestral music and browse the mini gallery!
 

Dragonsreach

Super Moderator
Staff member
Also it's fun to put on some epic orchestral music and browse the mini gallery!
Try:
Two Steps from Hell
and
Future World Music

Symphonic rock/Trailer music you'll recognise...TSFH track Freedom Fighter was used in the JJ Abrams Star Trek trailer.
 

Jbickley00

New member
Ok, I will second most everything said here, as its basically good advice. I would offer a dissenting voice on homemade wet pallettes. While it is cheaper to produce a homemade pallettes, I still recommend the Masterson Stay-wet pallette and its specialized paper. My experience is that the parchment paper in a homemade pallette gets a little too wet and over thins my paints. It's also very good for a single session, but does not endure well to spending a few days in water. The Masterson pallette paper is a little more fiddly, but the paper is easily cleanable, has a very nice level of permeability, and a single sheet usually lasts me a month or so. Given that 30 sheets of paper are @5 bucks, it's not that expensive.
I'm not knocking homemade wet pallettes, just saying there is a reason to get the commercially produced ones.
Whatever you do, don't get the p3 pallette. It's twenty bucks, has a crap sponge and is not even watertight.
 
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