Have been adding different shades of gray for the past week on assault squad Chordeiles. Generally pleased with them so far, although they have a looong way to go before being finished. I also worked on their jetpacks, but they aren't shown here.
Combat Squad Nighthawk and Combat Squad Poorwill
Combat Squad Nighthawk
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Highlights: Highlights
Testing out highlighting on my assault marines... being super cautious, since I have some model-fear. Mixed Gray & Black 1:1 and got a very subtle shine on the model's exposed surfaces, leaving crannies black. Any tips on highlighting? Right now just planning on going 1:1 to 2:1 to 3:1 with more limited application each go, then applying a black wash, then a gray re-highlight.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Update
Working a lot, and we should have a release candidate for our first computer game by the end of today: it's been a good touch of work, but pretty fun!
Warhammer Stuff:
-Assembled all the assault marines
-Spraypainted them (in the future, I'll return to spraypainting on sprues... touch up is a pain)
-Got my order of Scouts and Scout Bikes.
My Army List is looking like this:
--bought--
HQ - Captain Korvydae @ 155 pts
Troops - Assault Marines (x10) @ 255 pts
Troops - Scouts w/Snipers + Tellion (x10) @ 200 pts
Fast Attack - Scout Bikes (x4) @ 145 pts
--planned--
Troops - Tactical Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 250 pts
Troops - Tactical Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 245 pts
Elites - Sternguard Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 350 pts
Elites - Assault Terminators (x10) @ 400 pts
Total: 2000 pts
Warhammer Stuff:
-Assembled all the assault marines
-Spraypainted them (in the future, I'll return to spraypainting on sprues... touch up is a pain)
-Got my order of Scouts and Scout Bikes.
My Army List is looking like this:
--bought--
HQ - Captain Korvydae @ 155 pts
Troops - Assault Marines (x10) @ 255 pts
Troops - Scouts w/Snipers + Tellion (x10) @ 200 pts
Fast Attack - Scout Bikes (x4) @ 145 pts
--planned--
Troops - Tactical Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 250 pts
Troops - Tactical Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 245 pts
Elites - Sternguard Squad w/Pod or Rhino (x10) @ 350 pts
Elites - Assault Terminators (x10) @ 400 pts
Total: 2000 pts
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Stuff Arrived
My GW order arrived today:
-2 Assault Squad boxes
-Codex: SM book
-2 brushes
-6 paints
Still waiting on my Forge World sprues, which should arrive either tomorrow or early next week.
-2 Raven Guard upgrade sprues
-1 Captain Korvydae
Idea is to make a very special assault squad to accompany Korvydae: his rules (if my opponent allows Forge World rules) lets me take assault squads as Troops units as long as I bring along a scout unit too... in all other senses he is just a jumppack Captain. The big thing there is that it'll let my assault squads not only contest objectives, but claim them too!
I'm hashing out a tentative Army List plan tonight: goal is to have a very mobile, fluffy force emphasizing mobility and precision deep striking that can play well from 500 to 2000 points.
UPDATE:
Forge World sprues arrived too... the detail is incredible on them!
Also grabbed cutters and a file from the hardware store... will be fun to get started in on these models!
-2 Assault Squad boxes
-Codex: SM book
-2 brushes
-6 paints
Still waiting on my Forge World sprues, which should arrive either tomorrow or early next week.
-2 Raven Guard upgrade sprues
-1 Captain Korvydae
Idea is to make a very special assault squad to accompany Korvydae: his rules (if my opponent allows Forge World rules) lets me take assault squads as Troops units as long as I bring along a scout unit too... in all other senses he is just a jumppack Captain. The big thing there is that it'll let my assault squads not only contest objectives, but claim them too!
I'm hashing out a tentative Army List plan tonight: goal is to have a very mobile, fluffy force emphasizing mobility and precision deep striking that can play well from 500 to 2000 points.
UPDATE:
Forge World sprues arrived too... the detail is incredible on them!
Also grabbed cutters and a file from the hardware store... will be fun to get started in on these models!
Friday, August 5, 2011
First Combat Squad
My box of stuff from Games Workshop showed up! I had ordered online their starter painting set, some super glue, and a can of black spraypaint. The starter set comes with a small oddball collection of paints (no green!), a cheap-ish brush, and 5 snap-together bolter-equipped soldiers. Because I'm weighing the pros and cons of entering the hobby of painting lots of little guys, this set of materials is a kind of 'test run' to see if I enjoy painting them enough to do so regularly. It's a bit of a costly test tho: I've gone out and gotten a small painting table and a stool too, so I got to work right away.
First I took them outside and spray painted them black. I used a cardboard box, placing the sprue on its side leaned up against the interior. We have an empty parking space, so I just did it there. Quick short bursts on both sides until the sprue was covered.
After the sprue'd dried, I brought the sprue inside and took the marine bodies and shoulder pads off the sprue. I touched up the removed models with black where the sprue had connected them, and attached the bodies to their bases.
The snap-together aspect of these models is really dumb: the pegs don't really fit right, and the joins between parts are quite loose. Thankfully, the 'non-starter' models are much more poseable and professional looking. For these models I'm sawing off the snap-pegs and just using super glue.
After they dried, I confirmed that I really just wanted to practice technique on these marines. They are supposed to be painted blue, but Dad already has an impressively painted collection of these smurfs; since I'm likely going with a darker-colored army anyways, I'll paint these marines dark with white shoulderpads.
Now, I had a small Blood Angels army way back when, and I remember how hard it was to paint white on black: it's always an uneven, brush-strokey, blobby mess. So I resolved to do something fancy for my first painting bit: paint the shoulder pad white. I mix 2 drops of white and black 1:1 to get a dark gray, and add 3 drops of water from my drinking cup to make it a bit more liquidy. After applying it to the shoulder pad and chest emblazonment, I added another drop of white to the mix, and gave the shoulder pad another thin coat. Repeating, it took several thin layers to build up a semi-respectable light-gray foundation. Only then did I use the white alone (2:1 paint/water) and finish the white shoulderpad. I then did a bit of half-hearted highlighting with my leftover light gray.
This had taken a while, seeing how I had done 5 shoulderpads with 5 thin coats each, so I wanted to practice brush control a bit. Towards this end, I painted the omega symbol on the right shoulder pad white against its black background, and trimmed both pads with a gold metallic paint. It took lots of fine motor skill I've not used in a long time, but I got it done with minimal touch-up work.
A brief complaint: the black shoulderpad, for some unknown reason, has to be snapped onto the model. The peg is completely wrong: I had to saw it off on each model just to get the shoulder snug to the model.
After this, I mostly dinked around trying to highlight a few things on the model by coloring them. Here's the back after my efforts (eyes are a *pain*!):
And here's the front:
By this point, it'd been a couple hours, and I needed to go to sleep. I'll revisit these (prolly with a wash on the shoulderpads and some highlighting) later.
First I took them outside and spray painted them black. I used a cardboard box, placing the sprue on its side leaned up against the interior. We have an empty parking space, so I just did it there. Quick short bursts on both sides until the sprue was covered.
After the sprue'd dried, I brought the sprue inside and took the marine bodies and shoulder pads off the sprue. I touched up the removed models with black where the sprue had connected them, and attached the bodies to their bases.
The snap-together aspect of these models is really dumb: the pegs don't really fit right, and the joins between parts are quite loose. Thankfully, the 'non-starter' models are much more poseable and professional looking. For these models I'm sawing off the snap-pegs and just using super glue.
After they dried, I confirmed that I really just wanted to practice technique on these marines. They are supposed to be painted blue, but Dad already has an impressively painted collection of these smurfs; since I'm likely going with a darker-colored army anyways, I'll paint these marines dark with white shoulderpads.
Now, I had a small Blood Angels army way back when, and I remember how hard it was to paint white on black: it's always an uneven, brush-strokey, blobby mess. So I resolved to do something fancy for my first painting bit: paint the shoulder pad white. I mix 2 drops of white and black 1:1 to get a dark gray, and add 3 drops of water from my drinking cup to make it a bit more liquidy. After applying it to the shoulder pad and chest emblazonment, I added another drop of white to the mix, and gave the shoulder pad another thin coat. Repeating, it took several thin layers to build up a semi-respectable light-gray foundation. Only then did I use the white alone (2:1 paint/water) and finish the white shoulderpad. I then did a bit of half-hearted highlighting with my leftover light gray.
This had taken a while, seeing how I had done 5 shoulderpads with 5 thin coats each, so I wanted to practice brush control a bit. Towards this end, I painted the omega symbol on the right shoulder pad white against its black background, and trimmed both pads with a gold metallic paint. It took lots of fine motor skill I've not used in a long time, but I got it done with minimal touch-up work.
A brief complaint: the black shoulderpad, for some unknown reason, has to be snapped onto the model. The peg is completely wrong: I had to saw it off on each model just to get the shoulder snug to the model.
After this, I mostly dinked around trying to highlight a few things on the model by coloring them. Here's the back after my efforts (eyes are a *pain*!):
And here's the front:
By this point, it'd been a couple hours, and I needed to go to sleep. I'll revisit these (prolly with a wash on the shoulderpads and some highlighting) later.
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