For the paint schemes I continued with my method designed to call back to the classic daemonic legion art in Slaves to Darkness, using wild clashing color schemes which lean towards pastel shades or bright colors. However, this time I tried a new technique, for me at least, contrast paints. I chose to give contrasts a try in hopes to have slightly different results on the second batch of a dozen fiends, than the first batch. I watched a few videos and fiddled with contrast on a few bits and shields. Then I gave it a shot on the old lead.
I have to say the result of the contrast painting was functional, but I didn't love it. I found the shading effect that contrast provides often felt too understated for my purposes. I ended up in most cases giving a drybrush and highlight on them to get the effects I wanted. In several cases I still needed to do dark lining to provide shading in the deepest areas as well. So, my verdict on contrasts is, they are 'fine', but nothing amazing. It's basically a thick ink that requires you prime in a light tone instead of a dark tone. I found the time saved in this process was essentially paid back by having to line or shade due to having to use a light primer color. I think contrasts will let you achieve functional results in a bit less time and with less prior skill than before, but experienced painters probably can do better or will treat them as just another ink pot.
All that said, the first five came out pretty well. The pastel colors let me get some different looks that my first batch. Fiends scuttle about quite a bit, but I did get them to sit still for some close ups...
Five Fiends is not a full unit. One more Fiend is required before they are a complete unit, but five is a good start, nonetheless. In terms of points, five Fiends weigh in at 200 points, and this is where I stand at the end of January.







Fiendishly good!
ReplyDeleteI am sooo happy you keep going on this Slasnesh army! I'm really exited to see your new pieces add up!
ReplyDeleteGreat start to the new season, the colours are very nice.
ReplyDeleteInteresting to read your notes on Contrast paint, they seem to agree with what I've seen elsewhere - to get a great effect you have to do a lot of work in the underpainting, a zenithal white prime or a quick drybrush doesn't really cut it. So far I've resisted splashing out on any and I think I'll stay that way. Thanks for the input!
Nice Fiends!
ReplyDeleteI've started using contrast-type paints as base colours for brightly colored models. Basically this gives me a basecoat and a wash in a single layer and then I layer on highlights as normal. I find it speeds up my workflow somewhat.