NMM

paintedponie

New member
blackorc.com has had a few how-tos lately that I\'ve found pretty helpful, but I have yet to see a good description of NMM. While I\'ve been playing around with it and getting some good results, I\'d be interested in hearing how some of you truly talented folks do it.
 

Chern Ann

Only when they're green
Staff member
\"NMM\", non-metallic metal
Technique used to paint metal textures using non-metallic paint.

It\'s effectively a 2D technqiue, ie deciding where the light is shining from and painting what the metal would \"look like\".

The best way to do this is to copy it out of 2D media, or other NMM paint jobs as reference. The best advice I\'ve seen is that when you\'re painting NMM, your final highlight should be pure white; this is especially true for attempting NMM steel or silver, if it\'s off-white then it won\'t look like metal.

Try this too?http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mini-painter/files/>_FAQs/NMM/
 
Z

^Zataan^

Guest
NMM tips

Tip: Try NMM with metallic paints. It really looks good and shines like real metal does.
Tip2: You could give the NMM-areas of your mini a gloss varnish but watch out getting it to the crevasses \'cause there is nothing worse than a shining shadow!!:p You could also use a GW ink wash since they give a shine too... They look good and give some colour for gold and such... But as with gloss varnish don\'t apply it to the crevasses... You could also use tamya clear paints instead of GW inks.

I hope that was helpful, please visit my homepage :) http://koti.mbnet.fi/launiska
 
wanted to agree with Zataan on the use of inks. A base coat of scorched brown with a drybrush of snakebite leather followed by a flesh or chesnut ink wash gives a dark gold/coppery effect. Was quite effective on my Tyrus Inquisitor model.
 
Metallic NMM

Like what you\'ve said, Zataan. Will be experimenting with these tips. Thanks!


Originally posted by ^Zataan^
Tip: Try NMM with metallic paints. It really looks good and shines like real metal does.
Tip2: You could give the NMM-areas of your mini a gloss varnish but watch out getting it to the crevasses \'cause there is nothing worse than a shining shadow!!:p You could also use a GW ink wash since they give a shine too... They look good and give some colour for gold and such... But as with gloss varnish don\'t apply it to the crevasses... You could also use tamya clear paints instead of GW inks.

I hope that was helpful, please visit my homepage :) http://koti.mbnet.fi/launiska
 

hagness

New member
3-step NMM

Most forms of highlighting seem to work best with several shades between dark and light, at least in broad areas (not sharp folds). Depending on perspective and the location of your virtual light source, this may or may not be true. (Take a spoon outside once and hold it a couple feet away.)

However, I\'ve found a good 3-step process for smaller areas of NMM. For gold, I first do a base coat of Coat d\'Arms oriental flesh. Next, use flat white to pick out the bright reflections. Finally, use a Coat d\'Arms or other flesh ink opposite the white. Flesh is slightly lighter than chestnut inks and works better in my opinion.

Don\'t try to blend too much. I typically do what I call \"antialiasing\" where I thin the white down so that there\'s no sharp edges where it goes on. If you look at reflections, no matter how close you get there\'s not a sharp, clear line between light and dark, but there\'s also no real blending. That\'s antialiasing. The inks don\'t need thinning, of course.

For NMM silver, try the same with a base coat of gray with a tiny bit of blue in it. I like Coat d\'Arms shadow gray. Then highlight with flat white and use a black ink wash or thinned black paint. If you use black ink, you may want to add it to some of your gray and use that, because black ink covers very effectively and antialiasing may be difficult.
 

shink1m

New member
I have always been astounded with NMM. But trying to copy off an NMM style would be the best way to start. IMHO, it is an expert-level approach to blending colors and finalizing with light-oriented highlights. I try to make it happen with the GW W40K paint set. I suggest you do, too. They have plastic marines which are just aching to get an NMM paintjob! lol
 

Sanitarium

New member
Well, the best way to learn is to start on paper.

As some already said NMM is basically a 2D tecnique so the best way to understand it is to try first to get it on 2D draws: try drawing some simple objects in metal (an axe for instance) and then try to shade it with a pencil (you have huge ammounts of comix, artbooks and actually the rulebooks of the miniature games you play to copyx from) or with some tempera. When you\'re confident on 2D just apply it to a model with relatively easy areas (space marine, veicle or something that has relatively big areas to paint on) and then just go on more challenging jobs:)

Good luck.
 

Ritual

New member
My biggest concern right now is why a 4-year old thread about NMM was dug up all of a sudden? Hasn\'t this topic been thoroughly investigated in these four years? ???
 
N

NecroN

Guest
Sanitarium appears to be reading through every thread from the begining and replying to quite a few. This is causing a ton of old 2002 threads to come back. Feeling like a bit of a flashback actually.
 
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