That kickstarter is amazing. I am a hobbyist who suffers from a degenerative condition. It has destroyed my spine and left me unable to walk. I can relate to that orc because I have two metal rods in my spine. It’s great to see a company that is inclusive of all kinds of hobbyists.
@@codyott1982 Sorry to hear that. I have one level fused, which is L4/5. I do however have other levels that are completely gone. All of my lumbar spine is gone as well as three discs in my thoracic region and one in my neck. Neurosurgeons will no longer touch my spine so I just live with it. I have severe spinal stenosis which has weakened my lower body. I no longer have any normal feeling from my belly button down. Worse on my left than right. And can no longer walk more than ten metres without having to sit down and rest. I also live with severe chronic pain. So I can totally empathise with what you are going through. It’s a terrible experience to live with. I just pray your suffering isn’t too great. I find strength and solace in my faith and my wife. I will keep you in my prayers. God bless.
@@RuthlessMojo genuinely interested to know but how important is it to you to see yourself in your characters, I think this is great theres the choice and product but when I play I like to play someone completely different from myself.
@@jimbo220 That’s a good question. It’s not important to me to see myself represented in the miniatures and their subsequent games. Obviously I go with who the character is meant to be. The thing that interested me about these miniatures was the fact they were representative of characters with various disabilities. As I mentioned it’s not important to me but it may help other players out there with disabilities. I have a physical disability (my degenerated spine) but I don’t have a mental disability or a disability that is severe and is physically obvious. Basically, you wouldn’t know if I had a physical disability unless you knew me. I do know however how stigmatising a disability can be. A lot of people with disabilities feel that way. All they want is to be treated like everyone else. I’ve always seen the tabletop hobby as therapy. The great thing about it is it’s accessible to everyone. So if these miniatures are going to encourage people with disabilities to take up the hobby or make them feel more comfortable and accepted in the hobby sphere I’m all for that. Nobody should be excluded because of a physical or mental disability.
The worst thing that happened to one of my models was a couple of years ago, at the Golden Demon at Adepticon, I overheard a very well-known, excellent miniature painter talking to a couple if guys looking at the case. This painter pointed out my Mangler Squigs, and told these guys that it was the worst thing in the case. He then spent 15 minutes pointing out every single shortfall of my work. I was stuck in line, on the 30 foot drop side, so I had to hear the whole thing. I spent 116 hours on it. It's in the top 5 best paint jobs I have ever done. I can't enjoy the mini anymore. It just sit in my display cases being hated now.
Your artistic color scheme first approach is refreshing, and I appreciate even putting the beginner instructive detail of what keywords to use in Google helpful. Thanks, Lyla! You are awesome. 😊
Hi from Germany! Thanks for Götz! Membered him only for the „Schwäbischer Gruß“, but his 2 iron prothesises were medieval masterpieces. It‘s amazing that he lives for over 80 years though war and robbery was his daily business. Now the soccer EM in Germany starts. No time left to adore your paintings… but you did great as usual!
I like the "painting" transitions. The pinkishturquise light at the end were spot on. On dark/black every dust is visible. Also synth and 80's like music in the background is great. I loved your videos earlier too, but this is a noticeable improvement. Cheers from Poland!
Great tips that I can use in my kit building. Especially using the airbrush and toothbrush technique, definitely going to try that for mud splatter on military vehicles. Great video as usual, keep them coming.😁
Worst thing that happened to one of my minis was I got a used model and it was sitting in some spirit green to get some paint off. Someone came in and they remembered I cleaned the bathroom earlier, so they thought the container of green liquid on the floor was dirty. Darth Maul got flushed down the toilet 😢
Fantastic video! One question I have is regarding zenithal highlighting, I don't an airbrush at this stage. Can that step be done with a spray paint can in the same way or is there some different trick to it?
You can always try to emulate this airbrush technic with rattle can spray. It is harder to get to the right application but it could work. Another way could be to try the shaded base coat technique that I first saw from Mr. Wappel. With this technique you apply several different colors very wet and quite fast to your model.
Out of curiosity, why did you decide to paint the hand holding the axe flesh tone instead of continuing the coloration of the metal band to create an artificial hand?
I bought a knight and horse miniature that had a wonky arm while on vacation. I didn’t realize until I got home, and I didn’t want to bother with mailing him back to be replaced. So I ended up chopping the whole top half off and replacing it with the top half of a different mini. It turned out better than expected, but cutting up 2 brand new minis hurt a little 😅
I put paints on my Two Thin Coats caps as well. The trick is: Get some 200 grit sand paper and run it around the cap a couple times and then put the paint on. It goes on clean and even.
One thing I dont understand with my Speedpaint(and possibly Contrast paint, but I have not used them in over 8 months), is that it seems a lot more runny that when you apply them Lyla? In this video, when you applied the Puppy Red to the mini, it looked a lot thicker tham my paint......why?
Götz von Berlichingen's prosthetic hand is also the origin of the "Swabian Salute," which includes the root of the English "Kiss my A*@." To add to it: There's badass, then there's "Mozart wrote a song with your catchphrase" badass, because, Mozart did just that.
.....that is a totally fair question that I don't have an answer for. I suppose because the golden highflow lives on my desk and the speed paint medium is in my drawer!
do you have any tips for a way to achieve the look of a controlled airbrushed zenithal highlight for those of us without airbrushes? I find rattle cans hard to control and grainy/speckly for my liking, and I feel like every time i try slapchop drybrushing it just looks muddy and chalky! even with a dry brush palette and a high quality white paint..
Hi! I'm using rattle cans! Both Vallejo and some generic car ones or even ones from Action which are rather bad XD😂 The trick is to work in nice temperature about 22-28 Celsius degree, both air and rattle can. Also DO NOT rotate rattle can but only models/minis. After painting rotate can upside down and spray couple seconds until no paint is going out. Should do the trick ;)
So how does mixing in the lighter paint lead to a glaze? I saw a 3 parts speedpaint: medium mixed into what seems like regular paint. Wouldn’t that make it thicker than the speedpaint mixture? My attempts so far have been chalky with this ratio.
Hi Lyla, Why did you paint over the mini, as opposed to stripping it first? I’m assuming time was a consideration, here? The end result is still awesome, but I would have been worried that overpainting would ruin finer details. So much so, that I would *have* to strip the mini first. Guess that’s one of the reasons why you have a successful RU-vid channel, and I… watch your videos… 😂 Cheers,
speed paints are very thin, so they don't build up as quickly, meaning I can paint over it without fear! I usually only strip if I have built up texture.
Thank you for this video. Its very inspiring. Especially the edge highlights using the sides of the brush Unfortunately and sadly, any video that uses an airbrush is a no go for me 😢
My most painful thing I have done to my miniatures is fix the Matt sealer spray that had frosted it white when I left it overnight to dry outside. I didn't know at the time that humidity affects the spray.
Most painful thing was just acknowledging that I wasn't gonna finish it lol there were a few models that i wanted to love but they were just... they weren't fun to paint, I couldn't justify pushing through anyways because I was unlikely to really use them or whatever. There were a couple I painted, repainted and repainted and then finally was just like "ok, no, time to give up on you and add you to the bits and bobs bin"
Very cool, will have to try that. I don't usually paint organic, creature miniatures, more mechanical ones (Battletech) that tend to have fewer round and bulbous parts. Curious to see how this will turn out. Also, for a pronunciation of Götz von Berlichingen: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mHXQBJ8NhA0.html#t=0m26s German pronunciation is difficult. :)
Götz von Berlichingen, despite the uncanny similarities, isn't an inspiration for the character of Guts from the manga (and anime) Berserk. He just happens to be a mercenary swordsman in for various companies in eastern Europe (or European-like area) who only became even more badass after losing his arm and getting a prosthetic (or two) made, and whose successes as a mercenary granted him near lordly status before being declared an outlaw for some time, only to then later gain an even stronger reputation for heroism. He even had a play written about him by Goethe. He may not have been an inspiration for Guts, but he could EASILY be an inspiration for YOUR next fantasy RPG or wargame character.
Worst thing that I did was to a bunch of metal miniatures: I was soaking them in acetone to get paint off quickly and tossed in last second a metal St. Celestine model with her black plastic base and only discovered much later when I was trying to get this mysterious sticky black goo off heritage hobbits. A nightmare that I eventually threw my hands up at and just accepted that my blobby old miniatures had extra blobbiness.
I lit the scraps from a kitbash on fire to "represent my previous character who died in a friendly fire fireball incident" brought the charred plastic in and placed it on the table as a joke saying I had "updated my mini"
The most painful is finish painting a blood bowl team and instead of picking up a can of Army Painter "Matt Varnish" I picked up Army Painter's "Matt White Undercoat Spray". The less said the better :(
If you don't mind me asking: you used so many layers/glazing steps that there'd hardly be any time saved over a 'conventional' painting technique. What is the benefit of using a 'speed' paint for this over simply making a regular glaze consistency using normal hobby paints?
Like I said, I'm a perfectionist, you definitely don't have to do as many layers! It also depends on how high quality you want the model. My bar for quality is pretty high, so for me, this is faster! But if you're just a speed paint and dry brush kind of person, than this is definitely not faster.
@@LylaMev Thank you for your reply! I had wondered if the speed paints might have specific qualities that made them better for glazing and layering with. I will have a go at your method, albeit in a somewhat reduced number of steps. I need to up the speed of my mini painting and I've tinkered with speedpaints (including but not limited to slapchop) after getting a starter set. However, I really haven't been that satisfied by the results, and usually end up doing additional highlighting/layering steps before I'm satisfied with the results. Unfortunately, this brings the whole painting time up so that it's not a whole lot more efficient than 'regular' painting methods. As a result, my speed paints mostly serve a niche role as slightly more opaque/intense washes and filters. That's a pity because I had high hopes for actual speed increases when I first bought the set.
@@toferkrz946 Well, I imagine there's a bunch of us hobbyists who are still searching for good ways to use these (still relatively new) products, so if that generates clicks for a knowledgeable RU-vidr, I'm happy to oblige.
Two things I'd love to see in your videos. an intro sequence. your intros are a bit all over, a 5 or 10 second splash would help make it feel cohesive. Also, your recording space desperately needs a bit of sounds dampening. Thank you so much for the great video! such a great paint job and excellent tips.
Wow, Götz von Berlichingen in a paint video, nice one. According to a play from 1773 by famous German poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe named after that knight, he coined the phrase "Kiss my arse" ("Leck' mich am Arsch" in German today - "Leck' mich im Arsch" back then). The emperor's troops besieged his fortress and commanded him to give up, and that was the reply he shouted down from atop his battlements. As you said, "a badass indeed", haha.
Got to be honest I preferred the original paint job. I used Contrast paints on a Death Guard army and got a much better result, not necessarily because I am better. I don't like it when speed paints, (Any speed paint) are used and the white of the undercoat is visible through the layers of speed paint and this was true of this model. I note, to highlight and counter this you used regular acrylics. Also the metal did not have the right finish for an iron coarse look. I would have mixed shade into a dark metallic, i.e. lead belcher. Orks don't carry bright and shiny, it's utilitarian and brutal for them. Also the same original metal could have given that shiny edge. Finally, blood spatter on any surface is not blood red for more than a minute or so. The blood darkens and looks almost rusty, so a bright bloody finish does not cut it. I still liked the video because you make me think.
The original paint job was the exact same techniques! But you are right, I did like it better. I edited my video, wrote the script, recorded the script, then realized I accidentally deleted all the video.... so I attempted to repaint it exactly as I had the first time.
some colors are great, while others..... are not. I have found that the blues and greens are gorgeous, but reds and purples are hit and miss. I swear it all comes down to each unique color. However, they are more consistent in color, opacity, etc. than contrast paint!
@@LylaMev I agree with this, the only colour that didn't go well for my Tyranids was the most important one the Howling Sand for their base exoskeleton. The Carribbean Ocean blue I use is great but with everything else due to my colour choice for primer they look darker than shown on Google.
Yeah, thhe end result has nothing to do with speedpaints, but let's do a misleading thumbnail about it anyway. It's just same old, same old acrylic highlighting after all.