Loved painting Goku and Gohan in this anime style! Which part did you enjoy watching the most? Can't wait to show you guys the full diorama with Cell Final Form. Be sure to subscribe so you don't miss out! And please - share this with your friends! Also - if you want to see a cool before and after pic check this out! (paint list is there too) - www.patreon.com/posts/dragonball-z-and-38440196
It’s all about understanding light and shadows and then just over dramatizing them really :) Perhaps in the future I’ll make a video of how to do this.
@@BandaInku "Perhaps in the future I’ll make a video of how to do this." It would be awesome, because i can paint but I just don't have the understanding you have regarding shadows and light :)
Seeing stuff like this makes me want to prime the rest of my miniaturs and finish them. And with this weird stuff going on right now, it's a great time to finish my Pano army.
@@BandaInku will check them all! As for me, i never watched anime, but like repaint in 2D style. Bought my first Asuka figure yesterday (did not get it yet) for try to paint it ;)) P/S Hope you will get your goal 10k subs soon! Thanks for so nice content
Just came across this, it’s really impressive. Are you gloss varnishing regularly to protect the previous paint work? Do you then paint straight on top of the varnish? Does that ever cause any problems?
No the figures came just normal. They were painted already. I prepped them for custom painting by cleaning up any mold lines and imperfections with an X-Acto knife, sandpaper, and Milliput then primed them black. Basically the same prep steps done before painting a miniature 😁
Really it's whatever type of brush you like to use. I switch between cheap synthetic brushes and nicer Kolinsky ones. For this type I kind of prefer the synthetic at the moment.
I use the Harder and Steenback Infinity CR Plus and absolutely love it! I've got the 'Cult of Paint' version which is basically the same as the normal version, just in black 😎 Infinity CR Plus (With .15 and .4 nozzles) - amzn.to/3efkrc4 Infinity Cult of Paint Version: store.artis-opus.com/en-us/products/cult-of-paint-infinity-airbrush
On these I used a combination of Vallejo Model Color, Vallejo Game Color, and P3 acrylic paints. On future projects I will be trying out using Mr Color Lacquer paints. I've got the full paint list over on my Patreon if you want the exact paints and ratios used 😁 www.patreon.com/posts/dragonball-z-and-38440196
Hi, thanks for sharing. can you tell me or understand more about the print material of the current model, i plan to make one for myself too. I'll be happy to receive a reply from you.
These come fully painted. I just primed and painted over top of the existing paint after some cleanup of mold lines and such. The original paint job wasn't the greatest so I wanted to do a custom paint job on them to make them look awesome.
Podrias decirme que le pones en la cara a goku cuando vas a pintarle el pelo? Es Ltex liquido si es asi me podrias decir donde lo compraste y como se llama porfavor??
So it was glossy because I applied a gloss varnish to it to prevent me from rubbing any paint off while I was painting, and then later sprayed it with Testors Dullcote via the airbrush to make it matte.
I’ve been using various mini painting acrylics from Vallejo and P3 paint lines mostly. Though on my next figure I will be trying out using some lacquers from Mr Color
I used the paints shown in the thumbnail. All acrylic paints from P3 and Vallejo paint ranges. Recently started using some AK paints as well which are also great!
How do I take the parts without damaging the figure? I have a figure from AOT that someone gave me but sadly it's a bootleg so I was thinking of painting the figure but I'm scared of damaging the parts and it's very detailed, I searched over the internet and I don't see anyone talking about it, some say boiling water but I'm scared of using high temperatures
I just wiggled the part to loosen up the glue til I could pull the parts out. You could also get some glue debonder to drop in first to help break down the glue so you can get the pieces apart.