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/taps temple: can’t be a bog standard ork checkerboard if it’s tilted into diamonds, that’s clearly elf territory…

18:07 (1 media)

Another incredibly quick ‘two-tone’ test.

14:43 (1 media)

It’s not the tidiest highlighting job in the world, but I’m slightly irritated that this very quick two-tone ‘tester’ model is already looking nicer than the stuff I spend weeks on…

18:30 (1 media)

Right, enough procrastination, operation Fix The Bad Shadow begins.

19:41 (1 media)

I added an attempt at a cast shadow on the base, trying to emphasise that I want the scene to read as though lit from a shaft of light above, but I hated it so much that I set it aside for a full week 😅 I think it’s just far too extreme, I’ll try to soften it and lighten it to recover.

20:04 (1 media)

His little boots have a strap around them that I wasn’t expecting. Sudden colour paralysis.

18:27 (1 media)

I have, definitely intentionally, decided that he should have Very Shiny arms. Didn’t come up much in the show, but a big part of the books.

(Awkward Look Monkey Puppet dot gif)

19:17 (1 media)

Starting into his jerkin and only realising while taking this photo that the filigree is approximately the same width as the ridges of my fingerprints 😬

16:40 (1 media)

I mean I can’t leave him without hair…

17:56 (1 media)

When I say ‘finish the Farseer’ first, I obviously don’t mean not putting any paint on that tiny little face.

19:32 (1 media)

Well… I know what I’ll be working on when I get the Farseer finished up. Can’t believe it’s even smaller. Look at that likeness though, even just primed!

17:05 (1 media)

Blend, blend, blend—checks to confirm that almost nothing has changed—blend, blend, blend. What even is white?

18:52 (1 media)

This stretch could be a long one: the Actual White bits.

Adding blue-gray over the vibrant white primer and a lesser white to the brightest white to try to make blue-gray and lesser white look like a more vibrant white (at scale). As you do.

Deep in the ugly, patchy phase of it at the moment.

18:37 (1 media)

Starting on gloves and bangles. Critical aspects of any wargaming mini.

15:32 (2 media)

Filling in the remaining white space on the torso. It’s only when you take the photo that you realise there’s a fair bit more imprecision than you saw with your Human Eyeball. Fair play to the YouTubers out there getting crispy lines while filming what they’re up to.

19:53 (1 media)

Expanding the red, waiting for the storm.

19:06 (2 media)

Slowly now pushing the painted contrast to better match the boosted version, trying to make the chest ornamentation seem like a distinct material from the fabric.

18:05 (1 media)

I can’t remember who originally shared the tip, but if you struggle (like me) to get your non-metallics to actually look ‘shiny’, you can take a photo of your initial light placement on the mini and just boost the contrast to max and brightness to min. Try to match what you see with paint.

13:45 (1 media)

Of course, gentle reader, he would start into some non-metallic nonsense before he even has the base colours down. The boy’s a fool.

21:17 (1 media)

The order in which I choose to apply paint is both baffling and entirely self-inflicted.

18:26 (1 media)