Ciciro wrote:
So if I am painting red, I use a red wash, blue wash for blue, etc?
actually you want a darker wash, army painter do some very nice colour washes for this purpose, their red wash for example has quite a bit of purple in it, which actually shades red very well, just be aware that a wash will darken your colour so you may want to start with a lighter base colour with that in mind (for red it might be worth mixing some orange in to lighten it even if you want a deeper finished colour) also there is a difference between washes, inks and glazes, in some cases you can actually skip a base colour, spray white and then use an ink, it will pool in the recesses while running off the raised edges
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And if I don't exactly feel comfortable I'd successfully spray my models, can I just give it a base coat of white, and it would have the same effect?
spray primers are better at sticking to bare metal/plastic than most paints, they're also massively quicker and generally more evenly covering
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Man am I going to be buying a lot of paint. I already bought the main colors I'm going to be using, but now I also have to get some white, black, gunmetal, skin color, brown(Because what kind of squat doesn't have a beard?), and washes for all of that. Might be a month before I even get my first model done. (Well that and I am going to be buying most of em from England, so lots of 2-3 week waiting periods.
you can never have too many paints!!, also well worth trying out a few different brands, GW are okay and come in a nice range of colours, but I find them annoyingly thick and quick drying (I've lost track of the amount of times I put a tiny bead of paint to do a gem or tiny detail and it dries on the brush before it gets to the model!) many people use Vallejo as they're cheaper, thinner and come in dropper bottles which allow you good control with mixing and thinning, I've used Reaper master paints and LOVE them, they're some of the best on the market but not easily available in the UK, now I mostly use a mixture of army painter and P3 which are both great
Also worth discussing brushes while we're at it, GW are
okay but I find their quality control to be
dreadful I've had a few very good GW brushes, but I've also bought a load which don't hold their point and shed bristles like you wouldn't believe
![Headbang :{[]](./images/smilies/headbang.gif)
I've invested in some Rosemary & Co brushes recently and really like them, they're robust and good to work with, this was based on the recommendation of Chico on these forums, I've also got a couple of their expensive kolinsky sable brushes and they're even better
For undercoat, depending on what I'm painting, the army painter coloured primers are aceballs, I've used about 4 cans of demonic yellow on my imperial fists, and used a lot of the wolf grey on my imperial guard, as said above, the trick with primers is to spray long even coats and spray 'past' the model so the larger drops don't get on the model, also shake the primers for at least 2 minutes, it really makes a difference! lots of thin coats is better than one thicker coat, also primers shrink as they dry so don't panic if it looks like you've put too much on, plus you can always go over with another spray if you haven't covered enough
Finally as Tim says, it can be good to start with a thinned black wash over the basecoat to help delineate the model and give you guidelines where to shade
I'll do a step-by-step of how I paint my imperial fists one day, I promise!