Paint Blond Hair

frankox

New member
Hi! I need help to paint my rackham red lionness...
I\'d like to paint blonde her hair but I never do this before...
Can Someone tell me what colors I have to use for a nice result?
Thanks a lot
 

supervike

Super Moderator
wow...that is some convincing hair!!

I think a basecoat of \'snakebite leather\' with streaks of snakebite leather mixed with progressively more yellowish color. Then finally hit the topmost highlights with white.
 

EricJ

Active member
be careful using yellow, blonde hair is not very yellow, at least not nearly as yellow as our minds want to think it is, much like gold. Blend from a mid brown, to a light yellowish hue brown to white. I\'ve used bubonic brown in the past, and sometimes even that is too yellow.
 

frankox

New member
I\'d like to make blonde hair like this

http://www.arjayslotd.com/red_lioness.html

:eek: It\'s incredible...

How do you think it was made?

Thanks you a lot
 

Ogrebane

Active member
Try this. I\'ve used this a few times and it comes out similar to what your after.

(using GW paint names) Colours used, Bleached Bone, Snake Bite Leather, Skull White, Yellow Ink and Chestnut Ink.
1) I base coat with Bleached Bone.
2) I make a thin wash of Snake Bite Leather. I make this wash very thin, you can see your palette thru the wash, it\'s practically dirty water.
2)a. I mop this wash over the hair, usually doing this several times depending on the consistency (how dark) my wash is. One thing to keep an eye on is how the wash is settling into the recesses of the hair. You want the pigment to settle between the hair strands to provide shading, you don\'t want it to create the dread \"ring around the tub\" effect. You might add r a smidgen of dish soap to break up the water tension so that your wash won\'t do this as much.
3) I dry brush the hair with Bleached bone
3)a. If there is too much contrast between the Wash of Snake Bite Leather and the Dry brushing of Bleached Bone, this can be corrected by making a thin wash of Bleached Bone (Just like step 2), except using Bleached bone) and applying this wash over all the hair to even out the colour contrasts.
4) Repeat step 2)a. and step 3) as needed until the desired effect is achieved. I usually end up repeating these steps 3 - 5 times. Note: step 3) when repeated is usually done lighter each time to highlight.
5) Apply a very thin Wash of Yellow ink over all the hair.
6) Very lightly dry brush with Skull white on the highest highlights.
7) Apply a very thin Wash of Chestnut Ink in areas where you want additional shading that wasn\'t provided by the Wash of Snake Bite Leather. Repeat this step as needed and where needed. Be careful to not over do it. Take frequent breaks and come back to look at the effect you\'ve gotten before deciding to do some more, it is very easy to do too much.
NOTE: the reason for so many steps and repeated steps is that if you only did each step once, it would look very stark and contrasting, Hair isn\'t like that, especially blond hair. It ranged from a dirty brown at the roots to light blond at the damaged tips for long hair. It may be platinum blond which will be mostly white with a hint of bleached bone as shading. etc. in any case the highlights very often show very subtly different colours for the highlights or shading.

Hope it helps. I think I got this from the Brush guy.
 

skarekrow

New member
or you could try the o so effective and speedy snakebite leather-vomit brown-bleached bone.
using those colours and mixes in between them should get you a pretty dark blond hairdo.
 

Shawn R. L.

New member
One thing about doing light colored hair is to keep the difference between the shadows and the highlights of the hair itself not too far apart. In other words, dont make the shadows too dark. That tends to give the hair a coarse look.
 

vincegamer

Active member
I read about using gold paint in red hair somewhere and I tried it in blond hair. I find silver works better for blond hair.
Just add the tinyest amount of silver metallic paint to your mix. You will find it works to good effect.
 

frankox

New member
Originally posted by EricJ
be careful using yellow, blonde hair is not very yellow, at least not nearly as yellow as our minds want to think it is, much like gold. Blend from a mid brown, to a light yellowish hue brown to white. I\\\'ve used bubonic brown in the past, and sometimes even that is too yellow.
In effective this should be the best way to make blonde hair...
I think that a base of mid brown is necessary because only yellow hair is just what I don\'t want

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