Aliengod3 said:
You are correct, I want to be more versatile. That is a better way to explain my thoughts about improvement. As for the miniature mentor videos I have a couple and I use the concepts discussed in them (i.e. diluted paint, etc.) however even when I do this I end up with the same results! It does not make any sense.
Something to consider then, try doing a couple of minis in a
completely different style to your normal stuff - deliberately mix colours in new ways, add excessive amounts of 'texturing' or colour variation, weathering and edge wear, dirt and grime.
If you do a couple like that, where you know you're taking it to extremes, it should be easier to break out of your normal 'mode', compared with just trying to tweak your current methods. It might be a good idea to try this in a larger scale than you usually work in, the larger canvas can help break one out of normal painting habits. Might also help if they're historical models.
Then rein in back in a bit and you should be painting in a different way.
Alternatively, try this: paint a mini without thinking about it, then put it aside for a couple of days or a week. Now pull it out, look at it afresh and add to it with additional detail and texturing, glazes to tweak the colour here and there, and weathering. I started doing this a few years ago to make my paintwork a little more intricate and it worked for me; I'd never do enough in one go to get quite as detailed as I wanted to go at the time. Partly this was a form of laziness and fear of messing up, but after a break I found I was much less precious about all the paint on the figure already than when I'd just completed it.
There is a danger with this in going too far - you have to consider sometimes if you're adding detail for the sake of adding detail (it's fun apart from anything!) rather than because it's actually helping the end result be better.
Aliengod3 said:
I guess I want to learn more about how to paint with less saturation. Any tips are appreciated
Unfortunately I don't think there are any neutral greys available in hobby paints (at least not a set in different values) but you can mix your own fairly simply.
The route is to use white + black with a little brown to reduce the blueness (usually this is an umber but use what you have available - nearly any dark brown will do the job okay). It's a lot of work but many people who've done it report that the effort is well worth it since you get a lot of experience by doing it, in addition to having the paint available at the end of the day of course.
Truly neutral greys
aren't absolutely necessary to use for dulling down colours but they help avoid some unintended colour shifts.
Mixing complements are another route but it's not a simple area and overall I think split complements are a better bet at the end of the day; however it's a lot of extra effort every time you mix, especially when you're new to doing it. I would recommend trying it if only because sometimes it's the best way of neutralising certain colours (yellows for example, oranges sometimes too).
Mixing directly for a duller colour is the simplest mixing route, if you have the paints available; just using duller colours straight from the bottle is of course the very simplest way. But both may involve buying more paint, when greys and complementary mixing are definitely available with whatever your current palette is.
Einion