Paul your videos are some of the only ones that keep me coming back over and over because there's always something for me to learn that I didn't pick up before. We need you back in the RU-vid game!!
Thanks so much for that ! Thats a huge compliment I really do need to get back into it ! I’ve since became a tattooist so that does eat up a lot of my time now, But i do have a dreadnought that i’ve got a good plan for .. its just finding the time To get it built ! Haha
This video was so helpful. I'm planning to make some necrons who have a theme around old fashioned motorcycles and thought it world be cool to have the spaces between their ribcages glow like their was a fire fuelling them and this was perfect for what I was looking for.
@@PelicanPainting unfortunately I never got around to making them, though the idea is still floating around in my head, so you never know maybe one day I'll get around to making them! I'll definitely come back to this vid if I do decide to
@@purplepixel2240 i know how it is mate ! I’ve had a huge break from doing all these, But i’ve changed my career and setup a new workspace to get back into doing more video’s over the next few weeks !
These tutorials are excellent! Super happy to happened on them. Love the graphics on side showing in schematic what each step does. Would love to see some blue effects like with grey knight eyes and nemesis force weapons! (I have a lot of grey knights to go with my new codex which is coming soon)
Thanks so much for the tutorial. I'm looking to use PART of this effect on my Necrons. Instead of a green glow I want to create the Nobel gas color of Neon when it's charged, which is essentially exactly this orange but with the yellow areas more of a pinkish glow. If you ever get curious, I'd love to see you do something crazy and two-tone like this. Just spit balling. There's lots of videos on RU-vid showing how the noble gases light up. Thanks again! Neon reddish orange with pink . Helium, Warm orange peach color with purple Hydrogen, pink/magenta color with purple
Wow this was a really helpful Video and I really enjoyed it. Even if in not painting Salamanders I‘m pretty sure that these technics will help me getting a better painter. 👍👍
Thanks mate ! I’ve had a bit of a backlog of work hit me ! So the next video may be a week or so late, but otherwise i’m trying to make a weekly release !
Any chance you can give some tips on how to paint a power sword like a light Saber? I'm planing on a star wars themed list and I'm starting painting after a 20 year break hahaha, thanks for the great videos already!!!
Oh That sounds a great idea ! Yeah i’ll definitely look into how i would create that kinda look ! I had planned to do a “electric” looking power sword But i’ll try and pick up another sword to do this too !
Funny you should say that ! I’ve changed my career, and built a new setup and actually have a new box of marines arriving tomorrow ! You timed this well ! Haha
Well i wouldnt go for a really really cheap one, as they can just spray paint like a flamethrower without much control, But to get something good quality Either a Sparmax, badger, Sotar, or a paasche Anything like that would be something that you could lean easy on and go all the way to advanced with
NOOOOOOOOOO! You painted your fire on the brazier backwards!. Flames are hottest at their center and get colder towards the edges, so reverse highlighting a flame is what you should do (lightest color in recesses, darkest on edges).
Thanks for your comment mate, and i agree that as a rule a fire is hotter at the core But this isn’t being painted as “one flame” where this would apply, If you look at a photo of a bonfire, or even the examples i showed in the video of the airbrushed flames, Each induvidual flame lick on the outside edges of the fire source burn out more intensely, as they have more oxygen around it creating a more intense burn on that “lick” compared to the core that is sharing the oxygen source around it, Its hotter, but not burning as intense, “think a wick of a candle has a orange glow, wheras the flame slightly above the wick is the brightest/ hottest source, But one single candle flame behaves a lot differently to a bonfire, Wheras if it was a solid item “like the hammer” then agreed the heat source is a lot hotter on the centre as there arent any gases burning away fiercer due to the increased oxygen surrounding it and the edges of the item are cooler on the outside