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Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue May 25, 2021 7:00 am
by Thaluikhain
Oh, is that one of those really old school marines, rather than the modern ones that are inspired by it? Seems to have a slottabase, we'll not see those days again.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue May 25, 2021 9:50 pm
by Sigil
Yeah, the date on the tab for this one is 1990. It's actually the same armor pattern, MK III, as the Iron Warrior with the hazard stripes I did. I'm actually painting him as the first of a squad of old marines for a little diorama:
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The one in the top middle there is by far the oldest, 1987. It's a good two years older than I am.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2021 9:57 pm
by Sigil
Finished another lead marine over the weekend, this time a 1987 sculpt turned techmarine with a 1996 backpack from the previous Fabius Bile model.
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I took some inspiration for the markings from the 1990 "How to Paint Space Marines" guide, which wanted you to freehand all sorts of things on your tiny men to make them suitable for their roles.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Mon Jun 21, 2021 11:34 pm
by Sigil
I'm in the home stretch of making a diorama now:
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Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 4:15 am
by Sigil
I finished a pretty long project I've been working on, the stuff I've been painting for the last moth has been for a diorama, and its (kind of) done! I'll put a couple images here spoilered, but I took a lot of photos of it and have a whole gallery here: https://imgur.com/gallery/cGMKk7P
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Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Wed Jun 30, 2021 9:40 pm
by The Adventurer's Almanac
Oh god, oh fuck - I kickstarted the Bones 5 set before the pandemic started and my IRL group disintegrated.
Now I just got an email saying I'll be getting a box of 100 minis tomorrow. Fuck.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Thu Jul 01, 2021 5:03 am
by Sigil
Hahaha, well, you're set for a while then. I checked em out and they look like some cool minis.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Fri Jul 02, 2021 12:28 am
by The Adventurer's Almanac
Did I say 100 minis? I mean 250 of them. I also got the Daimyo, Townsfolk, and Dungeon Dweller sets...

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Fri Jul 02, 2021 6:48 am
by Foxwarrior
Good news: because your IRL group disintegrated, you have more time to paint!

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Fri Jul 02, 2021 2:42 pm
by The Adventurer's Almanac
Time to paint... for what? :screams:

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Fri Jul 02, 2021 2:46 pm
by Kaelik
The joy of painting.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Fri Jul 02, 2021 3:13 pm
by The Adventurer's Almanac
I don't have time for that! I have to write RPGs that nobody but my group will play!

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Wed Jul 07, 2021 10:45 pm
by deaddmwalking
I have Bones 1-5 stuffed in my attic area. I got my Bones 5 on 7/2. I didn't do my Pledge Manager until late in the process so I didn't get all the fin stuff I wanted but that's fine - I'm way behind anyway. I have three young 'uns (14, 10, 6) and I think that the youngest is now old enough so I can get back to work.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue Jul 27, 2021 7:15 am
by Sigil
Painted my first Dark Angel to test out some colors and see what I liked, think he turned out pretty well!
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The previous owner had filed off the skull (and whatever was originally on the right kneepad), so I had to do a little cleanup and retrofit a plastic skull onto him, I'm surprised it came out as nice as it did.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue Jul 27, 2021 9:15 am
by Thaluikhain
Oh, you don't see old marines like that very often. Excepting Belial and Azrael, the only two left for sale from way back when.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue Jul 27, 2021 9:59 pm
by Sigil
I'm on an oldhammer kick. I've got a complete (though not mint) 2e Dark Angel tactical squad box I want to paint, this box:
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All the models unpainted as well as the original transfers. I want to do another diorama using some or all of them and this first guy was a fun test to work out colors.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Wed Jul 28, 2021 10:30 am
by Thaluikhain
Oh, one thing, the old Dark Angels Green was much darker than the new official DA colour. If you are doing them legit old fashioned, that might be an issue.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Wed Jul 28, 2021 8:50 pm
by Sigil
Nah, I'm not so concerned about that. I spent a good bit of time looking at era appropriate dark angels and decided I wanted to do them somewhat brighter than that, brighter even that the modern official scheme. Going to keep the midtone very dark, but jump up to some pretty bright highlights. Similarly for the eyes instead of sticking with the dull red I'm going with just a sliver of that dark red layered over by a richer red, then pink, then straight white in the extremes and specular highlights. I want them to feel kind of old school while still standing out.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2021 6:16 am
by Sigil
Well, I haven't painted much since July, but the few things I did paint I'm very happy with.

First I did Elric of Melniboné as a gift for my father, who really likes the Elric saga:
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Next I did a chaos renegade of Khorne
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And just the other day I finished Mr. Hazard (another 88 renegade, this time as an Iron Warrior)
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Overall I was quite happy with all of these, but I feel like Mr. Hazard might be the best thing I've painted so far

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Thu Dec 16, 2021 11:00 am
by Koumei
Those hazard stripes are really well done, still has shome shading there so it isn't pure two-tone, lines are basically straight... good stuff. Not shit-talking the rest, but it stands out as something well-done that is harder than it looks (I know from experience putting it on tank dozers).

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Sat Dec 18, 2021 2:49 am
by Sigil
Nah you're right, he was harder than the rest, and mostly on account of learning to do the stripes. I had trouble with making some of the metal interesting, and I kind of phoned the gun in tbh (the ad he appeared in says that gun is a bolter btw). He's probably the best executed single figure I've done so far.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Mon Dec 20, 2021 8:17 pm
by Sigil
In a rare turn of events, I have managed to paint a mini the next weekend after finishing another one. This one's one of the cheap russian minis I grabbed with some conversions.

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Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Tue Dec 21, 2021 7:41 am
by The Adventurer's Almanac
The gradient on that barrel is mighty sexy.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2021 12:15 am
by Sigil
It's honestly a much more simple effect to achieve than it looks. Base it in steel, paint a little section in brass, then do purple and blue ink over the steel for the other two. Maybe go back over it in a few spots to strengthen the look. It looks great, but it's honestly one of the simplest things to actually paint.

Re: Painting Small and Expensive Plastic People

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2021 4:02 pm
by The Adventurer's Almanac
While it's a simple effect in practice, picking the right colors can be just as important!