I have spent the last month or so trying to decide what it is I wanted to get painted for the Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge this year and have settled on Late Romans. A few years ago I was about to enter some Late Roman Cataphracts into the Challenge but encountered my first and only ever Varnishing Disaster; this pout me off the project entirely for a number of years..... until now!
As a wee aside, and to quicken the process of painting up I'm going for "Wargames Standard" (I'm not getting any younger!) and have been trying to work out a way in which to use contrast paints as a substitute the oil wipe method, with the proviso that the contrast method had to be a notch higher (in my eyes) than anything I had managed to achieve with oil wiping horses in the past. I think I finally got to a point where I am happy with my new method; here's an incomplete Elven Steed showing off the basic results. Not too bad considering it is just a heavy drybrush of a medium to light grey over matt black with the contrast paint painted used not as a wash or a stain, but thickly as a coat of paint over the top of all that dry brushing. ikept the paint moving around the horse in order to avoid any pooling which would have resulted in more of a wash effect, not what I was after, It seems to have worked. There was however one snag which I'll come to in a wee bit.
I will go into more detail about the new fangled alternative to oil wiping in another article at a later date here on this blog.
Speed Painted/Contrast on *Smooth Plastic* Elves Steed Experiment















Darrell these are spectacular. While I am intrigued by the horse technique, I gear I will remain with the oil wipe given the preponderance of metal horses in the pile. The Naffatun are wonderful with the depth of colour standing out. I am now off to the Challenge blog to have a look for your stuff and comment - and then to get quickly back to working on my entries.
ReplyDelete