![]() ![]() I used two-brush blending to smooth the transitions. I used both in different areas of the metal, and the axes were made to look especially dirty. More inks for a dirtier look, less for a cleaner look. Basecoat in a dark silver metallic (the old Games Workshop Boltgun Metal – oh how I miss that paint), then shade with a mixture of black paint and the two inks. ![]() P3 brown ink is very red, so when mixed with yellow ink you get a nice rich orange brown color. It’s mainly metallic paints and inks (P3 brown ink, P3 yellow ink), with some black paint thrown in. I think I can consider my street cred for teaching that class pretty well established. I said in my previous post that I’m planning to teach a class on painting “tricky colors”-white, black, and red-at KublaCon and again at Gen Con. I left off the ice-formation base she comes with, since it wouldn’t match the other bases, and instead sculpted something to match, using the head that belongs to the hunter on the juggernaut’s base. I imagined the armor of a powerful and important warcaster would be carefully tended, unlike the warjacks. I painted Sorscha last, and she is much cleaner than the ‘jacks. It’s much easier to create randomness by accident than intentionally. But I think playing around with the whites a bit added an extra bit of texture and randomness that worked really well with the effect I was going for. Normally the models I paint later, once I’ve figured out my color scheme, turn out better, so this is unusual. I painted the Juggernaut first, and I think it came out slightly better. ![]() The Cygnaran runes on the hunter’s shoulder pad say “Fire.” Warmachine faction fonts can be found here. The Khadoran runes on the ‘jacks’ shoulders read “Br’er Fox” and “Br’er Bear,” named after the main antagonists in the traditional Br’er Rabbit stories. I imagined that the rust would drip down and collect most with the ‘jack in its resting pose, and I tried to imagine what that would be when painting the drips. The rust drips are going “down” in different directions. Filling it first makes painting a glow much easier. It’s very difficult to paint a believable glow effect in a deep recess, since you’re fighting against the shadow that the recess creates. To get the bright glowing effect for the ‘jack visors, I first filled them almost entirely with green stuff, since normally there’s a big recess there. This worked well with the extremely scratched effect I did for the turquoise parts, to make the Cygnar ‘jacks look extremely beat up and damaged, but in a completely different way from the Khador ‘jacks. And finally, I wanted to show off that I can paint both metallics and nmm (since many painters seem to stick with one or the other). Second, I thought it was a nice callback to the Nemo I’d entered in a prior year. First, I thought it would be fitting for the destroyed Cygnar jacks to be less shiny than the Khador ones, which were already quite gritty and corroded. Having a well-stocked bits box is a godsend for more ambitious projects.Įven though the models in this battlegroup are all painted using metallics, I used nmm to paint the destroyed Cygnar models on their bases. I thought they would work well as battlefield rubble. I had half of a hunter lying around from my Caine battlegroup, since I replaced it with a grenadier chassis, and a plastic Cygnar battlegroup box that Privateer Press gave away at Adepticon one year. Painting them involved a lot of time-consuming back and forth between painting scratches and glazing over everything with inks, but the end result was worth the effort. Since the axes on the extreme ‘jacks are really big and flat, I knew I needed to do something to make them more interesting to look at. I’m really happy with how the metals turned out, especially the axe blades. Subtle white shading is hard to photograph, and the metallic work is even harder to photograph. Then again, since it took me over two years to finally take decent photos of my own, I probably shouldn’t be complaining about what Privateer Press could do in the middle of a busy convention. You can see it in my battle damage tutorial, which goes over the technique I used to damage the ‘jacks. Unfortunately the picture taken by Privateer Press at the convention wasn’t that great. This group won the best battlegroup award in Privateer Press’s 2014 Gen Con Grandmaster Painting Competition, and appeared in No Quarter 57. ![]() I painted this group several years ago, but it took me a long time to take any decent photos (and even longer to remember that I did and get around to posting them, it seems). ![]()
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