Your esteemed co host " that's too red " Me - I hope we get a tutorial Ive only been using flour, extra opaque paints/ inks for the past few months for the extra punch , so all tutorials, tips and advice is very much appreciated.
Great tutorial on both the wood and the armor…really looking forward to “part 2” of the armor. Always something (usually many things) to learn from your videos Ms thank you very much for your time and efforts to teach us new understandings!
Love the pop - I feel like this gives another fluoro tone usage similar to how you did the red cape a few videos back, I can break more bad fluoro habits with these nuggets of info
The wood was a great addition to the quiver. The metal red though {chefs kiss}, I hope one day to develop the skills to come up with recipes that effective. This is what I'm here for. Thank you Technomancer, thank you.
I have to say thank you! I was watching several of your videos, I am going to paint two resin models of my daughters favorite video game. But I was having an anxiety attack trying to figure out the best way to prime them. I have an air brush I bought one a yr or so ago but never got to use it, because I had some health issues going on. So I wasn’t going to use it on these pieces because I thought it was going to be complicated to start. And these pieces are important to me that I don’t want to mess up the detail. So I thought about hand brushing the primer, which for the tiny pieces wouldn’t be difficult and given their size probably better that way. However the main piece was giving me pause. It doesn’t really have a lot of intricate details other than one area where a gate is next to a wall where paint can pool if not careful. So I purchased a citadel spray paint thinking it will probably be better, then I came across your video on airbrushing and you really simplified it. I was extremely nervous thinking it would be to hard to do or to learn because I need to get started on these next week so I have plenty of time to paint. So I am going to pull out my air brush thank fully it works lol and do some practice runs on cardboard till I get confident enough to prime my models. Keeping the Citadel just in case it’s more complicated than I think but wanted to tell you, your videos truly helped build my confidence to at least give air brush a try. At least to prime at the very least. So thank you.
This is a great companion video to your review of pro acryl fluorescents. I’m still trying to work through these techniques. Thanks for another great tutorial
It has been a pleasure to see you painting your Skaven. Your passion for the army comes through in these vids and on Warhammer Wednesdays. i can't wait to see the Vizzik video.
Great tutorial. I live the red, and it seems easy enough to stop a couple steps early if im aiming more for "tabletop" but still have it pop and read as metal.
My favorite wood recipe is Army Painter Oak Brown, then Monster Brown, then Monster Brown plus Ash Grey. I'll have to add in the ivory step and see how it works for me. We'll all be poppin' wood soon!
Wow this is absolutely phenomenal, two of the main things I was hoping to learn about for painting Skaven, I quite like the classic almost Roman army color scheme. I first started painting with Sylvaneth and your old painting dryad bark videos were some of the first things I came upon, I like this current take a lot. I’m looking forward to seeing what you do for warpglow. To add to that list I would suggest steampunkie metals, and the one that I find most daunting, fur. I love what you showed about adding wood texture with little dots. I am hoping to do many different fur schemes, and add more fur to places that aren’t necessarily sculpted using (hashing?) but I have zero experience. I want to make my army Redwall themed so like every woodland critter I can pull off, otters badgers opossums skunks raccoons. But I get intimidated with having to pick out the base/mid/highlight. And then there’s the skin. I learned from doing Sylvaneth that it’s very easy for things to look like brown blobs so painting in a way that is true to what I’m doing but also stands out. I recently got a ton of pro acryl paints but have next to no experience painting with traditional methods. When I first started painting, contrast paints were almost like a trap that I’ve had to move away from. Anyway great work thank you!
I know Vince is going for something a level up but I will probably stick with contrast/speedpaint and a dry brush for wood. Focus on spending more time on the fun details. However, I've recently moved away from just using Wyldwood for all wood. Snakebite Leather and Aggaros Dunes have been revelations, adding some lighter wood tones to my palette.
10:09 Golden High Flow makes my favorite fluorescent line. Second favorite is the Amsterdam Fluorescent Inks by Talens, which might be a little more difficult to find in the US. Arnau put me on to those during a workshop. I compared both these options head to head and they are really close in quality. Ps and boy oh boy (as you might say) are there a bunch of bad fluorescent lines (made mainly by hobby brands)!
This was a great video on painting red! A lot of red highlights end up looking pink or too orange. I never thought of using fluorescents and glazing over them, some other videos I've seen end up using the fluorescents as the highlight without as much glazing and blending so they end up looking a little out of place. I can't wait to try this recipe and adapt it to other colors. Also, I had a great time at your GenCon class for blending. You should consider trying to incorporate that teaching style into a video. The approachable "do this, then that, surprise! You learned x" was entertaining.
While you’re painting Skaven, can you make a video on painting high quality cloth? I recently figured out how to paint convincing NMM, and for some reason now my brain is confused whenever I look at a cloak or robe. Ive started overthinking it. I’ve picked up the basics from your other videos like “broad highlights”. But I’d appreciate a video on “try hard painting cloth/robes/linen”. I hope you haven’t already painted all the cloth on your skaven. 😅
Ah, see, that’s why I asked. Lots of YT videos say black lining, and then we trainees use black. I’ve wondered if it really means use that areas shadow color … add a spec of black to the shadow color, and use that.
When I was watching wood part, I be like "why it looks so dull, if you will not give it a coat of bright green or sepia filter... oh, here we go, thats Vince work now". And man, that RED (all with capita) is bright. Stealing this recipe from furless, yes-yes!
Im eager to use the red technique on my blood angels with the new stuff coming out for them, but looking at all my death company marines that'll be in black leaves me with one question, how do you paint black armor to not look so boring?????
one thing to add, it would be nice if you said the size of the brush you are using. It's one of those things I still mess up sometimes as I've gotten better at painting. I use a brush that is slightly too large as my control as gotten better but it makes it more likely that I will make a mistake.
10:15 alternatively you could go with a magenta or hot pink as fluorescent for your more colder reds (or colder environments). Based on what we are used to when it comes to orange and magenta pigments, you would intuitively say that the fluorescent orange is brighter than the magenta. However the fluorescents don't necessary follow those rules. All 3 fluorescent oranges I own are less bright than the magenta/hot pink ones. So if you want to go for max brightness, the magenta is a serious option. You can warm it up with orangey-reds on top. Edit: I need to correct myself here, the fluorescent oranges I own are actually a little brighter or at least close to the same as the magenta's/hot pinks. So if you want max brightness I would go with the orange as well. There are not many good red fluorescents on the market, but you can make a decent one mixing a magenta with an orange.
I am a little surprised that Inktense Wood didn't make an appearance, rather than sepia. I would have thought that would have been a slam dunk on this?
sweet wood technic , defo using that from now on would that popping red work just as well with different colors, like for example blue i plan on using on big metal parts of my Kharadron Overlords airships? what paints would be needed for that, dark blue, then sky blue and then some sort of fluorescent turquoise?
It really hard with blue honestly, if you're leaning into turquoise, Fluo yellow can do it, but most near Fluo blues don't really have that same kick, blue is just a more subdued color.
Stumbled across your channel in the past week and I’ve been consuming your content not stop! Could you use the same “red pop” technique for a warp glow from the follow up video on some Knight tubing? And as much as you don’t like GW paints, what would your peach tone suggestion be? Again, absolutely love your content. It’s so inspiring and informative.
If in yours "two techniques videos" the "boring" part is like the wood part we want more videos like that :) (now I know how to paint bases in my all-in Rum&Bones2 KS^^)
I'm more disciplined than that! I stayed past the wood. Wild Red recipe!!! Warp cannon is reminding me of fantastical matchbox hotrod cars of long ago, which were the only ones that really peaked my interest!
Hi Vince! Thanks for the video and sharing. For the red armor, what makes you stop at sunny skin tone and not go crazy all the way to white (before the series of glazes)?
Hey Vince, I don't have access to ATOM or Pro Acryl. Which other red seem to be the best ? Golden so flat, kimera, or Ak 3gen ? Thx a lot for all your wonderful contents !
Hey Vince! Loved finding this video as there are parts in here from both sections that I think I’ll like to use on my upcoming sylvaneth project. Question for you: I am planning on utilizing colder highlights for those models. For the wood, would I want to follow your brown grey and red grey steps but then instead of the buff utilize something like your white blue from ProAcryl mixed in with red grey? Wood is proving to be a very difficult material for me to grasp!
🤔 if one wanted to try that red recipe but by using purely pro acryl what would the steps be? I own the full line but haven't had a chance to expand to AK and other brands except for some key effect paints I needed here n there over the years. That said I got some big projects with a lot of read in my back log lol
Vince, do you not paint something like this as sub assemblies? isn't it easier to get into all the hard to reach places? Thanks for the vid, loving it as usual.
Hey Vince, not a question really related to the video subject, sorry, but have you shown off your mobile hobby 'bag'/setup? I went to the Tacoma Open for the hobby challenge, kept wishing I had this or that, but never wrote anything down. There was someone with a really cool handmade box with lights, and misc tools/supplies. What does you travel hobby setup look like? What might you whip up if you were going to partake in a hobby challenge (kitbashing a diorama with provided bits pile)?
Blue is tough, it's just a flat color, you're often better just finding a good bright single pigment blue and glazing it directly over the white or near white.
Hey Vince thanks again for another great video. I actually had a question, as a new painter how would I go about painting red skin that looks like it is glowing underneath? Again awesome video.
Hey Vince, I’m back to this video again, this is the best red I’ve seen and I want to do this but with magenta. My question is will it work and would you use, pthahlo green in the shadows? And same steps to pop but replace orange with fluorescent magenta?
Your shadows could be the same as here, or they could be the the green you discussed, either will work, but I will say that green will work a little better for reds, I would favor something with a little more dark blue for magenta. Now, the magenta itself, yeah, fluo magenta. and honestly, you could stop with it, or lay a more traditional magenta over the top.
Hello Vince. Question about ATOM red. Does it cover well over Burt Red? Mine ATOM red is quite transluscent straight out of bottle. And its more liquidy than AK 3rd gen for example.
I'm lazy, I just paint it bone or beige and flood it with S75 Inktense Wood. By the way, after you mentioning two thin coats of paint - have you tried Duncan's TTC paints? I would gladly hear your opinion.
Hi Vince, I don’t know if you are taking video ideas, but are there any things that should be thought about in particular when painting a very large model, to make sure it looks it’s scale next to all the smaller ones on the table? I recently acquired a Forgewolrd daemon, and I’m conscious it will be standing next to bloodletters. I don’t know if there is enough there for a video on its own, but wondered what you think, particularly when it comes to lighting considerations.
Came here to learn how to pop wood.
Watching this first thing in the morning for synergies
@@kellyhoesing2573 Same, I just woke up and wanted to pop wood with my buddy vince
Was waiting for the popping of cherries
Lot's of glazing required. 😉
It gets more difficult with age. 😢
"My genius knows no bounds", He's humble too ;) Kidding Vince, you are one of the masters in my opinion. I love the sarcasm.
I liked the format of two processes in one video. If you have short ones like this, combining them is great.
That first thin red glaze over the flor orange was a very satisfying step.
12:35 Daaammmmnn that looks crazy, imagine Speed Freekz painted like that
Your esteemed co host " that's too red "
Me - I hope we get a tutorial
Ive only been using flour, extra opaque paints/ inks for the past few months for the extra punch , so all tutorials, tips and advice is very much appreciated.
Great tutorial on both the wood and the armor…really looking forward to “part 2” of the armor. Always something (usually many things) to learn from your videos Ms thank you very much for your time and efforts to teach us new understandings!
Coming soon!
Love the pop - I feel like this gives another fluoro tone usage similar to how you did the red cape a few videos back, I can break more bad fluoro habits with these nuggets of info
The wood was a great addition to the quiver. The metal red though {chefs kiss}, I hope one day to develop the skills to come up with recipes that effective. This is what I'm here for.
Thank you Technomancer, thank you.
Absolutely stunning! I'm getting very inspired to paint up some blood angels in such a vibrant red, thanks!
The Brown Grey by Pro Acryl quickly became one of my go-to paints for so many things; great all-around color!
I have to say thank you! I was watching several of your videos, I am going to paint two resin models of my daughters favorite video game. But I was having an anxiety attack trying to figure out the best way to prime them. I have an air brush I bought one a yr or so ago but never got to use it, because I had some health issues going on. So I wasn’t going to use it on these pieces because I thought it was going to be complicated to start. And these pieces are important to me that I don’t want to mess up the detail. So I thought about hand brushing the primer, which for the tiny pieces wouldn’t be difficult and given their size probably better that way. However the main piece was giving me pause. It doesn’t really have a lot of intricate details other than one area where a gate is next to a wall where paint can pool if not careful.
So I purchased a citadel spray paint thinking it will probably be better, then I came across your video on airbrushing and you really simplified it. I was extremely nervous thinking it would be to hard to do or to learn because I need to get started on these next week so I have plenty of time to paint. So I am going to pull out my air brush thank fully it works lol and do some practice runs on cardboard till I get confident enough to prime my models. Keeping the Citadel just in case it’s more complicated than I think but wanted to tell you, your videos truly helped build my confidence to at least give air brush a try. At least to prime at the very least. So thank you.
Wonderful to hear and happy to help!
I think multiple techniques in the video was great both were covered well as well
Vince, as usual your wood goes hard.
Early in I knew it would all end in glazes. Great job.
It always ends in glazes! 😂
Love the way the wood looked when finished.
Thanks 👍
This is a great companion video to your review of pro acryl fluorescents. I’m still trying to work through these techniques. Thanks for another great tutorial
I sold my skaven from the box but kept this one , great timing of this video thanks Vince.
Instructions unclear, started pooping red
It has been a pleasure to see you painting your Skaven. Your passion for the army comes through in these vids and on Warhammer Wednesdays. i can't wait to see the Vizzik video.
So excited for that one!
I love watching your skaven painting videos, and these techniques you show inspires me to continue my own little rats ! Thanks for the video !!!
Great tutorial. I live the red, and it seems easy enough to stop a couple steps early if im aiming more for "tabletop" but still have it pop and read as metal.
My favorite wood recipe is Army Painter Oak Brown, then Monster Brown, then Monster Brown plus Ash Grey.
I'll have to add in the ivory step and see how it works for me.
We'll all be poppin' wood soon!
Wow this is absolutely phenomenal, two of the main things I was hoping to learn about for painting Skaven, I quite like the classic almost Roman army color scheme. I first started painting with Sylvaneth and your old painting dryad bark videos were some of the first things I came upon, I like this current take a lot. I’m looking forward to seeing what you do for warpglow. To add to that list I would suggest steampunkie metals, and the one that I find most daunting, fur. I love what you showed about adding wood texture with little dots. I am hoping to do many different fur schemes, and add more fur to places that aren’t necessarily sculpted using (hashing?) but I have zero experience. I want to make my army Redwall themed so like every woodland critter I can pull off, otters badgers opossums skunks raccoons. But I get intimidated with having to pick out the base/mid/highlight. And then there’s the skin.
I learned from doing Sylvaneth that it’s very easy for things to look like brown blobs so painting in a way that is true to what I’m doing but also stands out. I recently got a ton of pro acryl paints but have next to no experience painting with traditional methods. When I first started painting, contrast paints were almost like a trap that I’ve had to move away from.
Anyway great work thank you!
Love the red. It’s good to see some bright colors on Skaven. So many people just stick to muted tones.
this was great, the clownshow goofy part always scares me but I guess I'll just have to learn to power through
AKs Tenebrous grey is really nice, the subtle purple is 👌🏻
Great video thank you. I'm always painting reds as I play orks.
I know Vince is going for something a level up but I will probably stick with contrast/speedpaint and a dry brush for wood. Focus on spending more time on the fun details. However, I've recently moved away from just using Wyldwood for all wood. Snakebite Leather and Aggaros Dunes have been revelations, adding some lighter wood tones to my palette.
10:09 Golden High Flow makes my favorite fluorescent line. Second favorite is the Amsterdam Fluorescent Inks by Talens, which might be a little more difficult to find in the US. Arnau put me on to those during a workshop. I compared both these options head to head and they are really close in quality.
Ps and boy oh boy (as you might say) are there a bunch of bad fluorescent lines (made mainly by hobby brands)!
Finally i know how to pop that Lannister armor! Thank you
2 shorter related tutorials is easy to watch. Looking forward to the rest.
Hello ! My favorite place for painting tricks and tips 🎉
This was a great video on painting red! A lot of red highlights end up looking pink or too orange. I never thought of using fluorescents and glazing over them, some other videos I've seen end up using the fluorescents as the highlight without as much glazing and blending so they end up looking a little out of place. I can't wait to try this recipe and adapt it to other colors.
Also, I had a great time at your GenCon class for blending. You should consider trying to incorporate that teaching style into a video. The approachable "do this, then that, surprise! You learned x" was entertaining.
i love the Red and thinking of trying it on some Space Marines^^
Thanks vince ill try out this red recipe later today, i happen to have s regal red cloak that i think this will look great on
This solved some of my wood woes.
Love this red. I had good results using Golden High Flow Pyrolle Orange.
Poorhammer represent
Loved this, especially the wood part. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Two great tips for one. Excellent value. Thanks
I love this!! My stormcast have a magenta armor, and I want to experiment and see if I could get a similar result
Loving your Skaven videos Vince, that red is 🔥 Poor Ninjon, coming for the king 👑
You know it!
Dang, that red POPS.
While you’re painting Skaven, can you make a video on painting high quality cloth? I recently figured out how to paint convincing NMM, and for some reason now my brain is confused whenever I look at a cloak or robe. Ive started overthinking it.
I’ve picked up the basics from your other videos like “broad highlights”. But I’d appreciate a video on “try hard painting cloth/robes/linen”.
I hope you haven’t already painted all the cloth on your skaven. 😅
Awesome! Keep on painting those Skaven
That red is CALIENTE !
I’d like to see your black lining technique on this mini.
It was pretty simple, just thin tenebrous grey carefully dropped into recesses.
Ah, see, that’s why I asked. Lots of YT videos say black lining, and then we trainees use black. I’ve wondered if it really means use that areas shadow color … add a spec of black to the shadow color, and use that.
Anoter wonderful and timely tutorial. Think this might look good on the W.E. maulerfeind i have cominy up soon! Thanks again!
Wonderful!
Thanks Vince, great topic!
When I was watching wood part, I be like "why it looks so dull, if you will not give it a coat of bright green or sepia filter... oh, here we go, thats Vince work now". And man, that RED (all with capita) is bright. Stealing this recipe from furless, yes-yes!
Definitely gona try this
thats sooo goood!!! Thanks for sharing Vince!!
Great video, the red looks fantastic, need a new army now to try it on. Thanks a lot Vince 😩😂😄
Im eager to use the red technique on my blood angels with the new stuff coming out for them, but looking at all my death company marines that'll be in black leaves me with one question, how do you paint black armor to not look so boring?????
Great stuff friend 👏 👍 🤙
More-More Warp-blaster!
I like my wood dark, strong , rigid and holding a red warp blaster.
Looks nice.
one thing to add, it would be nice if you said the size of the brush you are using. It's one of those things I still mess up sometimes as I've gotten better at painting. I use a brush that is slightly too large as my control as gotten better but it makes it more likely that I will make a mistake.
Love your way of teaching thank you!
Just casually building the warpblaster while being shown how to do an amazing paint job. Maybe I'll aim for this and see how close I can get.
IMPRESSIVE WOOD VINCE. 😂😎😎
10:15 alternatively you could go with a magenta or hot pink as fluorescent for your more colder reds (or colder environments). Based on what we are used to when it comes to orange and magenta pigments, you would intuitively say that the fluorescent orange is brighter than the magenta. However the fluorescents don't necessary follow those rules. All 3 fluorescent oranges I own are less bright than the magenta/hot pink ones. So if you want to go for max brightness, the magenta is a serious option. You can warm it up with orangey-reds on top.
Edit: I need to correct myself here, the fluorescent oranges I own are actually a little brighter or at least close to the same as the magenta's/hot pinks. So if you want max brightness I would go with the orange as well.
There are not many good red fluorescents on the market, but you can make a decent one mixing a magenta with an orange.
The red tutorial is great inspiration to paint Iron Man for MCP. Thanks Vince!
Happy to help!
gotta try that!
I am a little surprised that Inktense Wood didn't make an appearance, rather than sepia. I would have thought that would have been a slam dunk on this?
TOo strong and shiny, I wanted this to feel a little more dry and old.
Greate timing just yesterday had problem with red and I always have problem with wood.
Perfect!
sweet wood technic , defo using that from now on
would that popping red work just as well with different colors, like for example blue i plan on using on big metal parts of my Kharadron Overlords airships?
what paints would be needed for that, dark blue, then sky blue and then some sort of fluorescent turquoise?
It really hard with blue honestly, if you're leaning into turquoise, Fluo yellow can do it, but most near Fluo blues don't really have that same kick, blue is just a more subdued color.
Stumbled across your channel in the past week and I’ve been consuming your content not stop!
Could you use the same “red pop” technique for a warp glow from the follow up video on some Knight tubing?
And as much as you don’t like GW paints, what would your peach tone suggestion be?
Again, absolutely love your content. It’s so inspiring and informative.
Thanks! Wonderful to have you along on the hobby journey!
If in yours "two techniques videos" the "boring" part is like the wood part we want more videos like that :) (now I know how to paint bases in my all-in Rum&Bones2 KS^^)
I'm more disciplined than that! I stayed past the wood. Wild Red recipe!!! Warp cannon is reminding me of fantastical matchbox hotrod cars of long ago, which were the only ones that really peaked my interest!
how does the ATOM red compare to the ProAcryl Bold Pyrrole Red?
I like it a little more, but they are both fantastic.
You are the goat, sir!
Makes me wonder if there is similar one could do for a really popping orange that didnt end up looking peach
Absolutely.
The red is outstanding, with the sharp edge highlights, do you just do less glazes of the red or are you going back to the peach?
Yep, just lighter glazing.
This looks grate , thanks for the tips 🙂
No problem 👍
8:44 can you use pro acryl bold pyrrole red instead of the atom paints red?
Absolutely.
Hi Vince! Thanks for the video and sharing. For the red armor, what makes you stop at sunny skin tone and not go crazy all the way to white (before the series of glazes)?
I want it more warm, and that is close enough to very bright for my purposes.
Would you also recommend the poppin' red for some poppin' Blood Angels?
Absolutely!
Tried to follow your wood steps. Got board.
I’ll see myself out.
Hahahaha just got it
Watched!❤
Hey Vince, I don't have access to ATOM or Pro Acryl. Which other red seem to be the best ? Golden so flat, kimera, or Ak 3gen ?
Thx a lot for all your wonderful contents !
Yeah, Golden So Flat Pyrrole Red would be the go to replacement.
IIRC you’ve used fluorescent pink for red before instead of orange - do you like orange better now or just in this instance?
Just different final product, wanted it more orange here.
Hey Vince! Loved finding this video as there are parts in here from both sections that I think I’ll like to use on my upcoming sylvaneth project. Question for you: I am planning on utilizing colder highlights for those models. For the wood, would I want to follow your brown grey and red grey steps but then instead of the buff utilize something like your white blue from ProAcryl mixed in with red grey? Wood is proving to be a very difficult material for me to grasp!
Yeah, that would work.
🤔 if one wanted to try that red recipe but by using purely pro acryl what would the steps be? I own the full line but haven't had a chance to expand to AK and other brands except for some key effect paints I needed here n there over the years. That said I got some big projects with a lot of read in my back log lol
Just use bold pyrolle red.
tracing all the individual lines??? man I admire your patience. Its drybrush for me, but love your work
What makes you decide to paint something like this with regular brushes vs airbrush?
Doing a video. ;) (Generally, it's easier for people to follow if I use a brush).
Would this translate to other colors? Deep dive into greens and purples?
Yes, although you don't want to use Orange for them. :)
How did you know I was about to paint a ton of world eater armor!
Vince, do you not paint something like this as sub assemblies? isn't it easier to get into all the hard to reach places? Thanks for the vid, loving it as usual.
Normally, but these easy assemble models don't do sub assemblies well.
Hi Vince, why didn't you go with your (?former) favourite Intense Wood (Scale 75) for the wash over Seraphim Sepia?
TOo strong and shiny, I wanted this to feel a little more dry and old.
Hey Vince, not a question really related to the video subject, sorry, but have you shown off your mobile hobby 'bag'/setup?
I went to the Tacoma Open for the hobby challenge, kept wishing I had this or that, but never wrote anything down. There was someone with a really cool handmade box with lights, and misc tools/supplies. What does you travel hobby setup look like? What might you whip up if you were going to partake in a hobby challenge (kitbashing a diorama with provided bits pile)?
I ahve not, good idea for a video. :)
Could this technique work for blue armor as well? what colors would i use instead of pastel peach and fluoro orange? a green or yellow?
Blue is tough, it's just a flat color, you're often better just finding a good bright single pigment blue and glazing it directly over the white or near white.
@@VinceVenturella Thanks! Any recommendations for a single pigment blue?
Awesome
Sorry, another question. Is it OK to glaze with red ink to have a more reddish finish ?
Absolutely. You can always tint through more glazes
Hey Vince thanks again for another great video. I actually had a question, as a new painter how would I go about painting red skin that looks like it is glowing underneath? Again awesome video.
It's a very complicated effect, effectively, you would get brighter where the skin gets thinner and would normally show blood.
@@VinceVenturella thank you so much for the response.
Hey Vince, I’m back to this video again, this is the best red I’ve seen and I want to do this but with magenta.
My question is will it work and would you use, pthahlo green in the shadows? And same steps to pop but replace orange with fluorescent magenta?
Your shadows could be the same as here, or they could be the the green you discussed, either will work, but I will say that green will work a little better for reds, I would favor something with a little more dark blue for magenta. Now, the magenta itself, yeah, fluo magenta. and honestly, you could stop with it, or lay a more traditional magenta over the top.
Hello Vince. Question about ATOM red. Does it cover well over Burt Red? Mine ATOM red is quite transluscent straight out of bottle. And its more liquidy than AK 3rd gen for example.
Yeah, mine has relatively good coverage and is thicker, that's strange, maybe it needs a really, really thorough mixing?
I'm lazy, I just paint it bone or beige and flood it with S75 Inktense Wood.
By the way, after you mentioning two thin coats of paint - have you tried Duncan's TTC paints? I would gladly hear your opinion.
Haven't tried them yet, I will eventually.
Hi Vince, I don’t know if you are taking video ideas, but are there any things that should be thought about in particular when painting a very large model, to make sure it looks it’s scale next to all the smaller ones on the table? I recently acquired a Forgewolrd daemon, and I’m conscious it will be standing next to bloodletters. I don’t know if there is enough there for a video on its own, but wondered what you think, particularly when it comes to lighting considerations.
In general, as long as it's all in scale, you're tactics are the same, as you move up scale, you need more detail, more nuance and so on.
Thank you very much Vince :)