This was cool! I'd love it if at the end of the vide you showd all your space marines you've done so far together, it'd be interesting to compare the different styles next to each other
I would love to try this for a kill team. Or combat patrol. A full army... wow that's a time investment and a half! You did a fantastic job mate! You should be chuffed!
Excellent work as always dude 😁❤️👍🏼 This turned out really well, such a cool style. Anytime I hear cell shaded I think of an old ps2 (I think?) game, XIII, always loved that one. Have fun and stay safe 👍🏼
This looks like a fun, awesome technique. How would this work for black armor? Do the same thing, but instead of using black as a liner, you use white?
I'm working on a guardsman army and have a few models with kilts. I wanted your opinion on how to approach cel shading on a pattern. My thought was to cel shade the base color and then lay in the lines as solid unshaded colors.
I did quit a number of hero minis in a more comic style, but based on cell shading for the colour, I am genuinely surprised it took this long for the “inking”. However I really liked the work you did. I did like the idea of using zenith and nadir painting, although on a model with more parts you would like need to convert that somehow, so a thought that springs to kind is to do something very similar, and use the gradients to paint over as a way to know where light and dark colours should be in general. V handy tip that honestly. I’m hoping to get back into some painting with the cheap intro box and do it in this style.
Tip for the gun color: go with dark gray and highlight with black, pure black chuncks didn't existed in comics because it will cost a lot in ink (dithering printing limitations) , so the darkest tones you would see on them where dark grays and purples
Very cool! Even cooler considering that a miniature patreon I'm subscribed to is releasing a 1/10 scale model of Lilith from Borderlands next month and I really had no idea how to go about painting it. So thanks for the tutorial
It's not a well-known term, but the opposite of 'zenith' is 'nadir' - but 'nadiral shading' is never going to be a term used by anyone but extreme grammar geeks.
Based on the fact that im currently thinking of getting in to painting Warhammer and your statement about this technique to just dont i feel like its a good starting place :p