Taking a little
break from Rackham I had a browse through my 'Box of Shame' as I like
to call it. This is the box of various miniatures I've purchased over
the years but haven't got round to painting for whatever reason. We
all have one. Mine is...overflowing slightly.
So I was looking
around trying to find inspiration for a new project and came across the
old Necron Overlord model by Games Workshop. A great sculpt in my
opinion despite it sadly being the now retired 'finecast' As with
every 'finecast' miniature it felt like the preparation stage took a
few hours more than it should have as I sculpted and filled all the
mistakes that 'finecast' provides (can you guess I wasn't a fan of
'finecast'?) Please feel free to share how much you loved 'finecast' in the comments ;)
Once that was done I
paused to consider what colour scheme I wanted to go with. Sometimes
when starting a project I like to take a black and white photo into
photoshop and have a play round with colour. You can either use an unpainted image or simply convert a painted image to
black and white (If you don't know how to do this have a google,
there are plenty of guides out there) Once you have your image in
photoshop, create a second layer and set it to 'overlay'. Then grab
the paint tool and put some colour on!
I wanted to step
away from the standard schemes you see with Necrons, 90% of them are
basic silver metal bodies with either green or blue contrast for the
orbs and gauss areas. I wanted to try some other metals, especially
having painted a lot of Non Metallic Metal lately it would be a nice
break. I wasn't overly concerned by being accurate to the 'fluff'.
Being a painter rather than a gamer I don't always follow the codex
schemes, although I did browse through the Necron codex to get
inspiration.
Here are a few
sketches of ideas I had for this model, these really are sketches,
they're rough and I don't usually paint the whole model (in this case
I didn't even touch the staff) It's just for me to get an idea about
what might work.
Scheme 1:
Mostly black
metallic armour, contrasted with some rich gold areas. I'm slightly
ashamed to say I abandoned this idea pretty quickly. I hate painting
black. I say I'm ashamed because I like to try and push my
boundaries. A colour you 'hate' painting is just one you haven't had
enough practice at yet.
Scheme 2:
With this one I
looked at having pale cream almost ceramic armour plates as supposed
to metal. Contrasted with a carmine red. I love this shade of red,
I've been using it quite a bit lately.
Scheme 3:
This one doesn't
come across so well in photoshop, I considered an oxidised metal for
the armour with perhaps copper. I think this scheme has potential but
in the end the second scheme had already won me over!
Now unfortunately I
actually did all this before I knew I'd be writing this blog so I
don't have as many photos as I'd like of the painting process, in the
future there will be more! First step is as always priming. I don't
really have a hard and fast rule for priming, sometimes I just prime
black but in this case I decided to go with Zenithal priming. I
primed all black then went back with white and did a light spray from
above the model. The benefits this brings is it makes it much easier
to see the details of the model as well as giving a natural guide to
lighting. Following this I always take a few photos of the model in
this state to go back and reference as I paint.
So I start to put
some colours on the model, for the red I used mostly 09134 Clotted
Red from Reaper Master Series with some blacks and purples used in
the shadows. The cream was a mix of GW Karak stone, Vallejo Model
Colour Ivory (70918) and a little VMC Leather Brown (70871) for the
darker areas. At this stage I also painted the armour joints with a
50:50 mix of Necro Gold and Thrash Metal, both from Scale Colour. The spine on his
back was painted with Necro Gold alone.I
left the helm for the moment because I hadn't fully decided what I
wanted to do with it.
I think that is
enough for this week! Not much actual painting but I feel it is very
important to have a good process with a project before you even pick
up a brush. How do you like to start a model? Do you do sketches,
collect reference photos or anything like that? Please share in the
comments and ask any questions!
I really like how you give yourself time to play with what it might look like. I always have wanted to learn enough photoshop to play around with basic stuff like this. It seems super useful but I'm always a little intimidated by how many tools there are in it. A little intimidating since I've never played around with anything like it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Nick. Photoshop is one of those tools that has ridiculous depth but just learning the basics gives you so much flexibility with what you can achieve. There are a few similar free programs out there like GIMP which should let you achieve a similar goal if you want to have a play.
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