Over the past two weeks I managed to work on three more Goblins from the Dungeon Attack set, in between doing work for the games I'm running at the Cold Wars convention . As I mentioned in my previous Goblin posts, I didn't want to paint them the same old green that has become so common for Goblins, so I consulted the D & D Monster Manual, and read up on Goblins. It said that their skin color ranged from yellow, to dull orange, to brick red...nothing about green. So, I decided to go with the middle of the range and paint them a dull orange-ish.
To begin with though, I prepped them in the usual way; soaking in water with a bit of dish soap added, giving a gentle scrub with an old soft toothbrush, then rinsing and drying. Afterwards, I primed them with Krylon Camouflage Flat Black with Fusion. I then glued them to 1" fender washers with Aleene's Tacky glue, and then glued the washers to a tongue depressor with a coupe small dabs of Elmer's white glue, for ease of handling during painting.
Like last time, I began by painting all their exposed skin areas with Accent "Golden Oxide". Next, I painted their Tunics with Folk Art "Butter Pecan", and the padded jerkin on the archer with Anita's "Burnt Sienna". For the fur areas on the neck of the mace Goblin, and the boots of the spear Goblin, I dry brushed the areas with Folk Art "Medium Gray". I then painted their hats with GW "Scortched Brown".
I painted the shields with Americana "Cadmium Red" and with Black; doing a striped pattern on the mace Goblin's shield, and a primitive grimacing face on the spear Goblin's. Then I did the backs of the shields with Ceramcoat "Walnut", and then all the straps and belts with Americana "Asphaltum". The Quiver I painted with Accent "Real Umber" and the arrow shafts with Crafter's "Spice Brown". I then painted the handle of the mace, bow, and spear shaft with the "Spice Brown". Next, I painted the fletchings by dry brushing them with the "Medium Gray."
My next step was to work on the stonework bases they were standing on. I painted these with Duncan "Slate Grey", and then painted the blobs of vegetation sitting on the stones with DecoArt "Forest Green". Lastly I painted most of the metal armor, weapon and shield parts, and buckles with Accent "Princely Pewter". The buckle on the archer's belt, the band on the spear Goblin's right leg, and the shin guard on the mace Goblin's left leg, I did in Ceramcoat "Bronze"
Lastly, I painted their teeth and the claws on their feet with Americana"Buttermilk". When all the paint was dry, I washed the figures completely with some watered down Winsor-Newton Peat Brown Ink.
When the ink wash dried, I added highlights to their skin and clothing by repainting some of the raised areas with the base color. I also added some highlights to the metal parts with Ceramcoat "Metallic Pewter", and highlighted their teeth and claws with the "Buttermilk". I also painted their eyes with the "Buttermilk", and added black pupils. Then, after everything had time to dry, I painted on a coat of Ceamcoat "Matt Varnish". When this had dried I flocked the bases. Even though they were sculpted to look like dungeon floors, I wanted to use my Goblins in outdoor settings, so I flocked them to look like perhaps the Goblins were standing on parts of old ruins or an overgrown path. After the flock had dried, I sprayed the figures with Testor's Dullcote.
As I wrote before, I'm pleased with how these are turning out. I can't wait to see them all grouped together.
Now there's only 3 more Goblins in the set to do.
Figures 67-69: Complete
My Efforts to Paint the Miniatures From the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th BONES Kickstarters!
Monday, February 24, 2014
Monday, February 17, 2014
Converting Yephemia the Cloud Giant to use with Uncharted Seas.
I'm sorry folks, but due to me being in full preparation mode for the Cold Wars convention, I was unable to finish any Bones painting this week. I was however able to whip up a quick conversion piece.
As some of you may remember, last July at the Historicon gaming convention, I traded my Griffon from the Bones Kickstarter to a friend who wanted a pair of them, for two of his Kickstarter minis: the Deathpriest, and the Female Storm/Cloud Giant. (See: A Change in the Numbers for details ) I had been playing around in my mind, for a while now, with the possibility of converting the Cloud Giant for use with my Uncharted Seas collection. Uncharted Seas is a game of Fantasy naval combat, and one of the elements in the game is the use of Giants, who can wade out into relatively shallow coastal waters and attack the ships. To do this I would need to cut the Giant in half to make it appear as if she was standing in water.
As I considered the figure, I had a couple decisions to make. First was where would I cut the figure in half, and the second was what would I do about her weapon: keep it pointing down, or raise it so it would be above the water. I decided I would make the cut right below where her hair hung down, that way I wouldn't have to deal with modeling the hair in the water. I also decided I would re-position the mace, so it would be raised up as if she was threatening a ship. This required I carefully cut it away from where it is molded into her clothes near the base.
So, to begin with I cut the mace free from the bottom of the figure with a hobby knife, trying to retain the shape of the mace as best as possible. I had to go back and trim and shape it a little, so the end looked like it was fully sculpted. I then cut her in half with a jewelers saw. Finally, I cut her arm right at the point where her wrist protector meets her elbow to help disguise the joint.
I then prepared the arm for reassembly. I had to trim a little bit off the upper arm to make sure the mace would be raised at a good angle. I also realized I had to make another cut, this time in the mace itself, as when the forearm was flipped around to make the mace go upwards, the fancy carving of the woman on the mace ended up facing towards the back of the figure, and I wanted it to face forward. So I cut the mace just above the handle, so I could rotate it around and have the beautiful carving of the lady face forward. Luckily, the Bones material is very easy to slice through.
I next drilled small holes in both parts of the arm, and both parts of the mace, so I could pin them, thus making the joints stronger. For the pins, I merely cut small sections of wire from a paper clip. To glue the parts together I used Gorilla gel super glue.
After I had glued all the parts together, I glued the figure to a 1.5 inch black-primed fender washer using Aileene's Tacky glue. Now the figure is all set to paint. She is shown below with the Giant that is sold as part of the Uncharted Seas line of miniatures.
And here she is shown with a Dwarven battleship.
As some of you may remember, last July at the Historicon gaming convention, I traded my Griffon from the Bones Kickstarter to a friend who wanted a pair of them, for two of his Kickstarter minis: the Deathpriest, and the Female Storm/Cloud Giant. (See: A Change in the Numbers for details ) I had been playing around in my mind, for a while now, with the possibility of converting the Cloud Giant for use with my Uncharted Seas collection. Uncharted Seas is a game of Fantasy naval combat, and one of the elements in the game is the use of Giants, who can wade out into relatively shallow coastal waters and attack the ships. To do this I would need to cut the Giant in half to make it appear as if she was standing in water.
As I considered the figure, I had a couple decisions to make. First was where would I cut the figure in half, and the second was what would I do about her weapon: keep it pointing down, or raise it so it would be above the water. I decided I would make the cut right below where her hair hung down, that way I wouldn't have to deal with modeling the hair in the water. I also decided I would re-position the mace, so it would be raised up as if she was threatening a ship. This required I carefully cut it away from where it is molded into her clothes near the base.
So, to begin with I cut the mace free from the bottom of the figure with a hobby knife, trying to retain the shape of the mace as best as possible. I had to go back and trim and shape it a little, so the end looked like it was fully sculpted. I then cut her in half with a jewelers saw. Finally, I cut her arm right at the point where her wrist protector meets her elbow to help disguise the joint.
I then prepared the arm for reassembly. I had to trim a little bit off the upper arm to make sure the mace would be raised at a good angle. I also realized I had to make another cut, this time in the mace itself, as when the forearm was flipped around to make the mace go upwards, the fancy carving of the woman on the mace ended up facing towards the back of the figure, and I wanted it to face forward. So I cut the mace just above the handle, so I could rotate it around and have the beautiful carving of the lady face forward. Luckily, the Bones material is very easy to slice through.
I next drilled small holes in both parts of the arm, and both parts of the mace, so I could pin them, thus making the joints stronger. For the pins, I merely cut small sections of wire from a paper clip. To glue the parts together I used Gorilla gel super glue.
After I had glued all the parts together, I glued the figure to a 1.5 inch black-primed fender washer using Aileene's Tacky glue. Now the figure is all set to paint. She is shown below with the Giant that is sold as part of the Uncharted Seas line of miniatures.
And here she is shown with a Dwarven battleship.
Monday, February 10, 2014
Goldar, Male Barbarian: Figure 66 of 265
This week I painted Goldar the Barbarian from the 30 New Bones set. With the completion of this figure, I am now officially at the point of having less than 200 figures to go.
I prepared this figure in the usual way; first soaking overnight in water with a little dish soap added, and then giving a light scrub with a soft toothbrush, and rinsing to remove any remaining mold release agent. I then glued it to a black-primed 1" fender washer using Aleene's Tacky glue, and then glued the washer to half a tongue depressor with two small drops of Elmer's white glue.
I began by painting his upper body with Americana "Shading Flesh". I wasn't sure, from looking at the sculpt, whether he was supposed to be wearing pants or have bare legs. The creases in his thighs looked more like folds in cloth than muscle to me, so I painted them as pants with Apple Barrel "Apple Black Green". I then painted his waist cape Folk Art "Poppy Seed". And finally, I painted the little fur loincloth, and what appeared to be areas of fur lining sticking out from under his bracers, with slightly thinned Duncan "Slate Grey"; and his ax handle I painted with Ceramcoat "Walnut".
Next, I gave all the flesh areas a wash with thinned Winsor-Newton "Peat Brown" ink. When this was dry, I gave his skin areas a drybrushing with some of the "Shading Flesh" with some lighter-toned Apple Barrel "Apple Flesh" mixed in to lighten it. I then went back and added some specific muscle and facial highlights with the plain "Apple Flesh". I also painted on two nipples using some of the "Shading Flesh" mixed with some GW "Terracotta". I then added stripes to his pants with GW "Golden Yellow"
My next step was to paint all the areas that appeared to be leather; the bracers, belts, straps, parts of the boots, and the upper shoulder guard, with plain black. Then I painted all metal bits with Ceramcoat "Metallic Pewter". I also, at this point, painted the white base with the "Walnut"
Lastly, I gave everything that wasn't flesh a wash with thinned Vallejo black ink.
When the ink wash was dry, I went back and added some highlighting to the pants with the base colors I had used; and on the black areas, I added some highlights with GW "Shadow Grey". The metal parts I highlighted with GW "Chainmail". I painted in eyes with white and then black pupils.
When everything had dried overnight, I painted the figure with a coat of Ceramcoat "Matt Varnish". When this had dried, I flocked the base. Finally, I sprayed the figure with Testor's Dullcote"
I'm pleased with how this fellow turned out. I needed a good fighter figure for my Song of Blades and Heroes games, as it seemed most of the figures I had painted so far were archers or magic users, and this guy should fit the bill nicely.
Figure 66 of 265: Complete
I prepared this figure in the usual way; first soaking overnight in water with a little dish soap added, and then giving a light scrub with a soft toothbrush, and rinsing to remove any remaining mold release agent. I then glued it to a black-primed 1" fender washer using Aleene's Tacky glue, and then glued the washer to half a tongue depressor with two small drops of Elmer's white glue.
Yes, I accidentally got some red paint on the figure while working on another project. |
Next, I gave all the flesh areas a wash with thinned Winsor-Newton "Peat Brown" ink. When this was dry, I gave his skin areas a drybrushing with some of the "Shading Flesh" with some lighter-toned Apple Barrel "Apple Flesh" mixed in to lighten it. I then went back and added some specific muscle and facial highlights with the plain "Apple Flesh". I also painted on two nipples using some of the "Shading Flesh" mixed with some GW "Terracotta". I then added stripes to his pants with GW "Golden Yellow"
My next step was to paint all the areas that appeared to be leather; the bracers, belts, straps, parts of the boots, and the upper shoulder guard, with plain black. Then I painted all metal bits with Ceramcoat "Metallic Pewter". I also, at this point, painted the white base with the "Walnut"
Lastly, I gave everything that wasn't flesh a wash with thinned Vallejo black ink.
When the ink wash was dry, I went back and added some highlighting to the pants with the base colors I had used; and on the black areas, I added some highlights with GW "Shadow Grey". The metal parts I highlighted with GW "Chainmail". I painted in eyes with white and then black pupils.
When everything had dried overnight, I painted the figure with a coat of Ceramcoat "Matt Varnish". When this had dried, I flocked the base. Finally, I sprayed the figure with Testor's Dullcote"
I'm pleased with how this fellow turned out. I needed a good fighter figure for my Song of Blades and Heroes games, as it seemed most of the figures I had painted so far were archers or magic users, and this guy should fit the bill nicely.
Figure 66 of 265: Complete
Monday, February 3, 2014
More Goblins: Figures 63-65 of 265
This week I worked some more on my Goblins from the Dungeon Attack set; completing another 3 of them. With big groups of similar figures like the 12 Goblins that came in the Kickstarter, I often paint them in small batches, (like with these goblins, doing them 3 at a time) doing all the clothing and accessories in each batch with the same colors; then when you put all the little batches together into a big group, the similarity becomes much less noticeable, and it looks like a nice hodge-podge mix of figures. The completion of these 3 Goblins mark the milestone in my painting efforts of having completed 65 of my 265 figures, leaving exactly 200 Bones from the first Kickstarter left to paint
As I mentioned in my previous Goblin post, I didn't want to paint them the same old green that has become so common for Goblins, so I consulted the D & D Monster Manual, and read up on Goblins. It said that their skin color ranged from yellow, to dull orange, to brick red...nothing about green. So, I decided to go with the middle of the range and paint them a dull orange-ish.
To begin with though, I prepped them in the usual way; soaking in water with a bit of dish soap added, giving a gentle scrub with an old soft toothbrush, then rinsing and drying. Afterwards, I primed them with Krylon Camouflage Flat Black with Fusion. I then glued them to 1" fender washers with Aleene's Tacky glue, and then glued the washers to a tongue depressor with a coupe small dabs of Elmer's white glue, for ease of handling during painting.
As I mentioned in my previous Goblin post, I didn't want to paint them the same old green that has become so common for Goblins, so I consulted the D & D Monster Manual, and read up on Goblins. It said that their skin color ranged from yellow, to dull orange, to brick red...nothing about green. So, I decided to go with the middle of the range and paint them a dull orange-ish.
To begin with though, I prepped them in the usual way; soaking in water with a bit of dish soap added, giving a gentle scrub with an old soft toothbrush, then rinsing and drying. Afterwards, I primed them with Krylon Camouflage Flat Black with Fusion. I then glued them to 1" fender washers with Aleene's Tacky glue, and then glued the washers to a tongue depressor with a coupe small dabs of Elmer's white glue, for ease of handling during painting.
Like last time, I began by painting all their exposed skin areas with Accent "Golden Oxide".
Next, I painted their Tunics with Folk Art "Dapple Grey", and the padded jerkin on the archer with Aleene's "Dusty Khaki". For the fur areas on the neck of the mace Goblin, and the boots of the spear Goblin, I dry brushed the areas with GW "Codex Grey".
I then painted their hats with Folk Art "Barnyard Red". I also painted the shields with Ceramcoat "Bright Red" and with Black; doing a half and half pattern on the mace Goblin's shield, and a quartered pattern on the spear Goblin's. Then I did the backs of the shields with the "Walnut", and then all the straps and belts with Americana "Asphaltum". The Quiver I painted with Accent "Real Umber" and the arrow shafts with Crafters "Spice Brown". I painted the fletchings by dry brushing them with GW "Fortress Grey"
I then painted the handle of the mace, bow, and spear shaft with the "Spice Brown". Lastly I painted all the metal armor, weapon and shield parts, and buckles with Accent "Princely Pewter".
My next step was to work on the stonework bases they were standing on. I painted these with Duncan "Slate Grey", and then painted the blobs of vegetation sitting on the stones with DecoArt "Forest Green". Lastly, I painted their teeth and the claws on their feet with Americana"Buttermilk". When all the paint was dry, I washed the figures completely with some watered down Winsor-Newton Peat Brown Ink.
When the ink wash dried, I added highlights to their skin and clothing by repainting some of the raised areas with the base color. I also added some highlights to the metal parts with Ceramcoat "Metallic Pewter", and highlighted their teeth and claws with the "Buttermilk". I also painted their eyes with the "Buttermilk", and added black pupils. Then, after everything had time to dry, I painted on a coat of Ceamcoat "Matt Varnish". When this had dried I flocked the bases. Even though they were sculpted to look like dungeon floors, I wanted to use my Goblins in outdoor settings, so I flocked them to look like perhaps the Goblins were standing on parts of old ruins or an overgrown path. After the flock had dried, I sprayed the figures with Testor's Dullcote.
Overall, I'm pleased with how these are turning out. As I said before, I think the dull orange skin really works on these figures. Especially in contrast to their drab clothing.
Now there's 6 more Goblins in the set to do.
Figures 63-65: Complete
Next, I painted their Tunics with Folk Art "Dapple Grey", and the padded jerkin on the archer with Aleene's "Dusty Khaki". For the fur areas on the neck of the mace Goblin, and the boots of the spear Goblin, I dry brushed the areas with GW "Codex Grey".
I then painted their hats with Folk Art "Barnyard Red". I also painted the shields with Ceramcoat "Bright Red" and with Black; doing a half and half pattern on the mace Goblin's shield, and a quartered pattern on the spear Goblin's. Then I did the backs of the shields with the "Walnut", and then all the straps and belts with Americana "Asphaltum". The Quiver I painted with Accent "Real Umber" and the arrow shafts with Crafters "Spice Brown". I painted the fletchings by dry brushing them with GW "Fortress Grey"
I then painted the handle of the mace, bow, and spear shaft with the "Spice Brown". Lastly I painted all the metal armor, weapon and shield parts, and buckles with Accent "Princely Pewter".
My next step was to work on the stonework bases they were standing on. I painted these with Duncan "Slate Grey", and then painted the blobs of vegetation sitting on the stones with DecoArt "Forest Green". Lastly, I painted their teeth and the claws on their feet with Americana"Buttermilk". When all the paint was dry, I washed the figures completely with some watered down Winsor-Newton Peat Brown Ink.
When the ink wash dried, I added highlights to their skin and clothing by repainting some of the raised areas with the base color. I also added some highlights to the metal parts with Ceramcoat "Metallic Pewter", and highlighted their teeth and claws with the "Buttermilk". I also painted their eyes with the "Buttermilk", and added black pupils. Then, after everything had time to dry, I painted on a coat of Ceamcoat "Matt Varnish". When this had dried I flocked the bases. Even though they were sculpted to look like dungeon floors, I wanted to use my Goblins in outdoor settings, so I flocked them to look like perhaps the Goblins were standing on parts of old ruins or an overgrown path. After the flock had dried, I sprayed the figures with Testor's Dullcote.
Overall, I'm pleased with how these are turning out. As I said before, I think the dull orange skin really works on these figures. Especially in contrast to their drab clothing.
Now there's 6 more Goblins in the set to do.
Figures 63-65: Complete
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