In this video I painted 100 faces in a day, I then share what I learnt with you! 0:00 Video Summery 0:20 Why Painting Miniature Faces Is hard? 1:00 Do Tutorials Help? 1:43 The Problem? 3:15 What I will Paint in 1 Day… 5:20 The First 75 ‘Practice’ Faces 7:45 The Next 22 Faces 8:19 The Final 3 Faces 9:33 What did I learn?
YOOO I had no idea you have a painting channel. Grew up watching and rewatching your skyrim videos endlessly, and now i run into this at 2 am, how splendid. Hope you can teach me a thing or two coz my painting skills are ass
The way I do eyes is by painting them first. Also, I actually paint the whole eye white initially, then fix my mistakes with the flesh basecoat, which makes it super easy to get it very clean. Then I paint the pupils with a dot of black--sometimes I even paint the pupils on one side or the other, so the model can be looking at something rather than staring into your soul. And again, I clean it up. This way, when I use a wash, the brightness of the eyes is dulled down, and they look perfect.
Looks like a good improvement, My advice for eyes (and faces in general) would be A- instead of washes, start with the darkest tone painted as a flat colour (e.g the shadow colour) B- paint the eyes now before adding highlights as it's easier to fix mistakes now while you're painting on a flat colour (also a micron pen might make doing the pupil/iris a bit easier, but don't use it to put the black base of the eye down as they are water soluble and will need varnish before you can paint over them) C- now, highlight up the face. Looking at how you paint, you don't seem to catch the eye area in your initial painting so I'm assuming you'll probably be alright to work like that without ruining the hard work you've put into the eyes (if you do, it happens you can still fix it, it's just a bit more work) I also noticed you became more deliberate with the brush as the video went on, on the first faces you were making several quick little brush motions to put paint down, but as the video went on it seemed like you were doing more single controlled brush strokes. 10 out of 10 for putting in work and pushing yourself to improve at something you aren't confident about. My kung fu sifu always told me that when training we have to be mindful and think about the movements so that we train correctly, he was a stickler for training right and a lot of people left his class because he wouldn't teach them new things until they got the other steps right (they thought he was ripping them off and dragging out the process), the reality was he had integrity and wanted to be sure they had learned the techniques sufficiently, passing on the legacy correctly was more important to him than the money he lost having people leave. His teachings have affected the way I approach most things in life, being present and mindful ensures you are committing the right habits into muscle memory, rather than just getting better at making the same mistakes, if that makes sense. :)
Hey man I love your gaming channel! Ahhh welcome to the ridiculously large and consuming world of miniature painting and all the joys and depression it will bring. I have to admit it's an extremely addictive hobby and (damn you games workshop for bring out new seemingly more amazing minis on a monthly basis) somewhat expensive but so worth it. The community is awesome and the tips and recourses are vast (praise the internet). As for the severed heads .... Diorama? I find when doing eyes use a you really need to wick the paint off the brush also a much smaller brush helps with some cheap magnifier readers, you can get them from the pound store.
The best advice I can give to you for eyes is to get a paintbrush with a really sharp tip! I'd only ever used synthetics (I think the same set as you have), and when I got a sable brush I could really tell the difference in how sharp it was, and how long the tip stayed sharp for. Rosemary & Co do some very affordable sable brushes, about £5-£10, and they're very good quality for the price!
Battle brother.....I want to see you paint all the miniatures for my LOTR Risk board game! I'd honestly pay to see it and own it lol. Thanks for the content Danny!🍻
When in about 1990 I plonked into Space Hulk, I dove into painting throughout about 20 years. Then I reached a conclusion that in those 20 years NOBODY had ever picked up one of my models and actually said: "Damn! Your dudes actually have a face!" So, I dropped the useless time waster of making something that tiny and is used in rule wrangled game look better than anybody but me cared about. And NOBODY noticed. Whether or not I played with the opponent for 10 years already. Or just met them yesterday. Minis need to look good ten feet away. Not look good for someone who streams a painting tutorial on a fifty inch, 8k TV. (Which I do, BTW.) Just my rant.
When I painted faces for minis I always started with a grayish white for the eyes and then used the finest brush and painted a line from the brow to cheek. Then I painted the rest of the face.
You could use the heads as part of the landscape. I saw a comment to put them on pikes maybe a detail for a castle or palisade wall. How about a pile of heads next to a champion or monster. A wall of heads similar to body wall in the movie '300'?
Painful to watch. Try painting them one at a time, rather than compounding the mistakes with so many in parallel? Lots of methods, start with the mid-tone, glaze down to create shadows and then highlight up to keep the transitions smoother - that might be easier for you. Mix your paints so that you have mid-points between colours so the contrast between your layers isn't so stark. When you paint eyes, do them early on after you've done the base coat, block the area in with dark brown, paint in the white (grey) and then paint the pupil. You can then easily correct each step.
I probably should of mentioned that I recorded this in a single day. Definitely agree on the compounding of mistakes and arrived at the same conclusion in the video 9:45. I think the next step would be to paint 1 face a day for 30 days and actually take my time on it.
@esotabletop I always painted the eyes white first and then painted a black line down the eye for the pupil then painted the rest of the face. I've always had great results that way rather than trying to place white in the eyes.
28 times smaller than you? nono my man, these are 28mm, not 1/28. They're a weird mix of 1/32 scale heads on 1/56 scale bodies so 56 times smaller than you.