Archive for the ‘Painting’ Category

PaintVagrant’s Chaplain tutorial

by PaintVagrant - August 19th, 2009

Our ol’ buddy PaintVagrant’s got another ass-kicking painting tutorial for us again, this time it’s a Chaplain he painted for a commission.

Before

After

Wanna see how it’s done? Of course you do.

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Weathering Powders: They’re Not Just For Sniffing Anymore

by Springfield Fatts - July 26th, 2009

Sup nerds. If you’re like me, you have adult onset diabetes from too many bags of Munchies, and you also like painting slightly homoerotic hunks of plastic and metal. I recently got onto the Ork bandwagon after Black Reach was released, and suddenly realized I’d have to paint things that were actually dirty. I had read over the blogs and guides and tips like you’re doing now, and had seen one of the tools used by military modelers (or “scale” modelers as they like to be called on their shitty forums) was weathering powders. Now, I consider myself a completely decent painter by all standards, and like trying out new techniques provided that are easy and cheap. So what the hell are weathering powders?

Weathering 1
Take a high quality pastel chalk used in a lot of art projects and sketching, grind it up to a very fine powder, stick it in a bag, and then charge the shells of human beings that buy them from you after you’ve renamed them from orange to something catchy like Rustgut Ochre and you’ve essentially got weathering powders, or pigment powders, whatever the fuck you want to call them. There are actually a few suggestions saying you can grind down art chalks from craft stores and create similar products, but I haven’t tried it. I got these at a choo choo store! It’s actually a decent bargain. Most are sold in kits of 4 powders, with a general color palette like rust, grease, or mud themed shades for roughly 10 dollars. When you think about it, that’s like 2 Games Workshop paints, so you won’t hear me complaining.
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Painting Rusty Metal, Ork Style

by richyp - July 22nd, 2009

This is a quick recipe I use when I want a simple but effective looking oily, rusty metal.

1) Mix up Orange Foundation Paint + Boltgun + Black (3:2:1), get a large brush and liberally plaster the area.
Rusty Ork Step 1
2) Drybrush Black + Boltgun over the previous layer
Rusty Ork Step 2
3) Do a very light drybrush of pure Boltgun over the raised edges and voila
Rusty Ork Step 3

For a final touch wash the crevices with Devlan Mud, followed by Badab Black.

Here’s the same technique applied to some in progress orks.

Rusty Orks in Progress

Richyp’s Ork Tutorial

by richyp - July 20th, 2009

Next in our series of awesome painters teaching you how to paint awesomely, richyp!

See more of Richyp’s work at richyp.com

A quick and easy guide to layering, by PaintVagrant

by PaintVagrant - July 20th, 2009

This wonderful layering tutorial is brought to you by painting superstar PaintVagrant. Click the thumbnails to view the images.