Working on the armour initially I started with a AP Gun Metal base with a small amount of VMC Dark Sea Blue and black added in. By adding in the Dark Sea Blue a lot of the metallic shine was removed which looked much better than the standard dark metallic colour I normally start from. A dark metal rather than a shiny dark colour. In the shadow areas I added some black and more Dark Sea blue. For the scale parts of the armour I tried to underline each scale. For the highlights I used the AP Plate Mail and Silver and finished off with VMA Aluminum. Again each scale (where I could) was picked out. I found that other than the helmet and scale skirt there wasn’t much armour on the figure. The chest area unfortunately is just a blob as it’s the join area of the two parts of the mould and is quite recessed. So I’ll have to use a fair amount of black to try and hide those (lack of) details.
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A red cloak to hide the blood |
Next was the cloak. The original painting only has a slight amount of the cloak showing, with a hint of red in the painting. So I went for red to add some life to the figure. To unify the figure the cloak base as VMC Flat Red (4/5) and VMC Dark Sea Blue (1/5). This was shaded down with more Dark Sea Blue (which made a nice purple shade) and black. Highlights were done progressively with VMC Vermillion and VMC Flat Yellow and white. I tried to add a lot of yellow highlight to the top of the cloak to get that bright sunlight look.
I had a go at the horns but then messed them up trying to do a too extreme highlight. So they got repainted ready for another try later on.
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Test shield - an experiment in yellow |
I’ve been stuck on the shield for some time. Rather than mess up the figure any more I grabbed a spare shield around the same size as the one on the figure and did some test paints. Initially I went for a yellow base and tried to shade down with VGC Leather Brown and Beastly Brown. However I got terrible tide lines no matter what and it all just looked dirty and muddy. I also tried shading with purple but again it wasn’t working out. I just can’t seem to work out shading yellow without it going muddy and ugly lemon yellow on the highlights. So after a few sad faces I scratched that and went back a light tan (think Bleached bone) base. At the suggestion of the wife I tried to use the pre-shading technique I had used on other parts of the figure for the yellow.
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Shield start |
As stated I started with a tan/off white base. I used the AP Soft/Strong/Dark tones to then do the shading. I had seen on one of the Painting Buddha videos the AP washes used as paints/glazes (on a very light base) with a very good end result. So I diluted the AP washes and used those for the shading going from soft->strong->dark tones. I highlighted up the tan base with VMA Light Sand and white. I found this much easier to get looking right wrt the blending smoothness. Then once done I used VMA Medium Yellow (close to the VMC Flat Yellow) and did a very light coat (near glaze) over this. With two coats the shield now was yellow, but the pre-shading had worked. I tried an extra highlight of VMC Lemon Yellow but that was too much and the shield started to look green, as can be seen in the picture. However I was onto a better way to paint yellow.
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Getting better |
This technique I redid on the figure and the end result is much better than any previous attempts. Needs some more work to get some more details out but it’s a good start. For the eagle I base coated in VMC Black/Grey. For the highlights I used the same Medium Yellow. This way the highlights would start to transition to the general shield yellow colour. Again this is an attempt to make the highlights more of a general bright yellow sunlight effect. I need to go back and add some yellow glazes I think to the helmet to tone it in with the top of the shield and the cloak.
So still to do is the axe handle, the glove, the helmet horns, the saddle bag and the centre of the figure (where everything is just a blobby half cast mess). I may also redo one of the fetlocks where the transitions aren’t a good as the other three.