Full project! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-7r5vGk7bzB8.html Real Terrain Hobbies! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KGt0NEngAis.html Tabletop World! bit.ly/3bzGzrV
Hi! Can you tell, is that drybrush on roofs looks good to you? I think it looks out of place, and on this scale it looks just like bad painting and not weathering or any other effect it tends to show. Is it only me? Should i rethink my point of view?
Hey Uterr. It definitely could use more time then what we had as far as those roofs go. I found Applying the lighter dry brush as Brent did worked well, but then afterwards applying more washes or overtones of paint in various areas like the big dips in the roof etc to give a more natural look on top of the dry brush. We did what we could with the time we had, but I’d definitely recommend doing the light dry brush over not as it really brings out the finer detail and makes it feel a lot less flat. Afterwards, if you do the steps I mentioned above it’ll really give it a nice natural blended look and feel.
Try dragging a paper towel over the rocks or even a fine tooth spongue. It leaves the grout in the cracks and cleans off the majority of the wet powder off the rock faces. I have have ten of Tabletop's buildings and they set a high bar for the rest of the terrain.
Stunning work and quick&dirty is the best way for getting much terrain on the gaming table. Maybe a little hint: Try a fine deodorant atomizer for putting water on your model. And use distilled water (avoids chalk edges) with a tiny drop of dish soap. I think it works much better than a huge atomizer with regular water.
Wait a minute, did you bring your 100 goblins all the way to Canada just to get a picture with them in front of the keep. This man has some dedication! love it.
Really cool idea to use pigment for the stones, it gives a super realistic look. Hopefully I can get my hands on a few of those cool houses one day... 😄
For your next HOBBY SCIENCE video, do you think you could do one on the different types of plastics used (viz. polystyrene (including its variants) and resin)? I know they need to be treated differently, but I don't really understand why...
Not related to this video, but could you make a video about mediums and flowenhancers. What Are They, how They Are different to each other. What to use in miniature painting... Just started (after over 35 years of pause) the miniature painting again and the stuff and materials have changed a lot! I have not seen food description about mediums and flowenhancers and there seems to be different kind of them ro different purposes. So it could be nice to have introduction video about this subject: who, what, how, why...
Do you plan to do some more Fantasy Related painting? Like DnD stuff or Monster with wounds and tentacles? Btw your videos are great, its even chill to watch and listen! Cheers mate
This project was in a different location, but how do you keep cat hair out of your projects when working at home? We have 6 cats who have varying levels of fascination with the painting process. Thanks!
Hahaha, it's hard, even with two cats! I have to re-take a lot of my 'glamor shots' to fix the cat hair situation :-) I also do my best to protect my mouse-pad style game mats and backdrops, those things attract cat hair like crazy!
I'll definitely will have to try that method for stone, I have some Desert Dust pigment lying around which should be close. What colour of paint did you use for the stucco? It looks nicer than the Deck Tan I've been using so far, it's a bit too yellowy.
@@GoobertownHobbies Thanks, I'll have to look into something like that next time I'm paint shopping. I've actually been using that same Vallejo Deck Tan for bone, teeth, claws, and other stuff like that too, and it works alright for those, but then they're a much smaller surface area.
@@GoobertownHobbies Several years ago, I did an experiment with several 3D-printed dungeon tiles where I primed them with either a very dark grey or a pale grey, and then used not-quite-drybrushing to do the stonework of the walls and floors, with the priming kept as the mortar color, working up in brightness from the dark prime and down in brightness from the light prime, and going back with slightly tinted shades for individual stones to get more variation. With a final edge highlight -- upper edges lighter for the dark tiles, and bottom edges darker for the light tiles -- I'm not sure which I liked better, although esthetically, the darker prime fits better for the environment of a dungeon. They both took about the same time, and I would need to do it again with more tiles to get a better feel for how long it takes.
I am enjoying your content. Very good! Thanks! I am more into historical gaming but my studio is almost done and I plan on Star Wars Legion, X Wing, etc. in the future. Check me out sometime. Cheers!
Square Enix concept artist usually visit cities like Colmar, Annecy and Prague to get their medieval inspiration. Before they could visit Europe, working with photo references caused them to get the scale wrong every time.
When you sprayed the water directly at the pigment it blasted some away, next time try shooting the spray directly vertical over the area and let gravity do the work, do this when you need to wet stuff but don't want patches or blobs.
Yeah.. also if you spent 2k on terrain you're probably in a position to shrug of a few bottles of nuln oil ;-) There's an old warhammer tv tutorial where duncan is painting terrain and he says something like "you'll need 3-4 bottles for this." I'm still horrified by that hahaha
Build it! Build it all! There's nothing in the world stopping you from creating your own village, brosky. I recommend black magic crafts for tutorials.
Brent, a little tip mate you can buy powdered paint pigments instead of paying a fortune out for so-called weathering paints you can mix the to get exactly what you want for about a quarter of the price most good art/hobby shops sell em, you might be able to get em on Amazon ( not sure bout this you'll have to check)
Hey Andrew! yup yup! On both the pigments and the washes we overpaid because we were on a time crunch and just used what neil grabbed from his local hobby shop. I've found some etsy stores that sell ~bulk pigments for reasonable prices.
@@GoobertownHobbies On that note you can also just buy a pastel stick of whatever color you need and shave it with a knife and make the pigment yourself.
Hey Brent, question for you about your airbrush setup. In your videos you don’t use a ventilator or anything. Do you find that getting paint particulate and dust settling all over the room to not be too much a concern? I ask because I’m researching an airbrush setup for myself. Thank in advance!
The settling around the room doesn't seem to be a problem at all, at least not in the quantities that I use. Just be careful with your direct spray, and don't spend too long breathing in the mist ;-)
@@GoobertownHobbies are you planning on doing more of that "random mini paint challenges"? They're one of my most favourite on your channel (and I think other people's too).
great stuff fun to see yes doing the prime in colors then black wight or gray saves time and eny flat oil bass spay paint can be prime see as post and the fluffy but no fluffy this time nest one
I'm kind of curious to see what goober town looks like. You probably get off the train at station. The stations a little battered. But there's a happy ork selling some sort of meat on a stick. As he smiles at you that's when a motorcycle rores by....
Well it be a great opportunity to do terrain tutorials. But I'd imagine given your resent actions. What you do is invite a bunch of people from the community to help you out. Also two words: mono rail.
@@BlackMagicCraftOfficial there it is. Three way collab incoming. I love your black wash recipe Jeremy. I take a shot every night before bed and it has improved my painting no end.
I am a huge fan but I can't lie my mind went straight to the gutter when you said " it was 5 fun filled days, I went to Canada, lived in Neil's basement and we made video." Fortunately for me my wife has the same since of humor so I didn't need to laugh alone. Now I have 9 of these buildings here from Table Top World to paint. So thankful to you guys for showing us this.
This is awesome, really, but if i may for such a big diorama next time you could use some pastels instead of pigments.Pastels with some wash is a really good and cheapo combination :)
@@GoobertownHobbies There wizard tower has been staring me in the face since you did the video and i foolishly checked out there website. .... guess it will be a perfect project to tackle when i get my Airbrush in May
the windows tip was gold, thank you, would you say some seraphim sepia would make them look like its brighter on the inside? say it was a night themed diorama
Scrimp on the paints, sure, but there's nothing more frustrating than a junky brush 😓 Building looks great. My daughter just picked up a Blood Bowl team. I sent her your way!
I love the work you do, you're an awesome painter, and are lots of fun to watch. One thing, though, the way you look at the camera and talk and the way you smile at the camera in your thumbnails is deeply unsettling to me. To the point that it's really quite amusing to me. Makes your channel stand out from the crowd, honestly.
6:40 I don't know how to say this, Brent, but I think you just made an enemy of about 100 generations of stonemasons and bricklayers throughout history :) You absolutely wouldn't expect grout or mortar all over the place, unless it was a slap-dash, built-by-half-wits shack, that wasn't expected to last more than a year :D
Hey Brent, I just want you to know your vids are always super relaxing to watch. You are like the Bob Ross of miniature painting. Cheers for making quality content man
Man, I didn't expect these houses to take that long to paint. Crazy! But I think you guys sold yourselves short, they really did come out looking great!
Adding that yellow to the roof is great and adds so much! Have you considered reading bedtime stories? I would love to hear your voice reading a D&D adventure!
I am really enjoying the videos from this colab! Thanks to you both! @Goobertown Hobbies. This is off topic, but I also want to thank you, Brent, for representing. I’d been watching your videos for a few months, when my five-year-old son came to me crying that he wanted to cut all his hair because boys at school teased him. Apparently, his short locks looked like “girl hair” to them. I was so hurt for him, but then I remembered you and your kick-ass hair. I showed him your video and said, “Look at Brent; he’s a scientist and a painter (two things my son loves). Check out his cool hair. Those silly boys don’t know what they’re talking about.” My son woke up the next morning smiling and told me he’d changed his mind: he likes his hair the way it is. Keep being awesome, Brent.
Goobertown Hobbies it’s definitely hard to raise a son without a buzz cut these days-among other things. I appreciate being able to show my lil guys cool and successful people who don’t fit some stereotype.
I’m thrilled to see all the attention you’re paying to tabletop world! I’ve had the Coaching Inn sitting primed on my bench for 6 months. Your last video gave me the push I needed to get it done this week. Keep up your excellent work!
Nice! The goobertown tabletop world glut is done... for now... but these buildings may return someday! I'm glad you've tackled that coaching inn, it's a really beautiful piece :-)
Great and extremely positive video as always. I've got a question, though: I've seen you spray indoors, and just have to ask if you have some specific setup for this (like an air pump of some description) or just a respirator is enough for you?
I watched the other video showing the 5 day paintathon, this was a nice "little" addition breaking it down to a level that couldn't really be done during those 5 days. Have you found any more junk to restore? Those videos are also great to watch. Did I catch you say your an organic chemist in one of your prev videos?
Hey hey! Yup I'm an organic chemist. I'm also always on the lookout for junk. No good tables recently, but I've got some other related stuff in the works :-)