looking forward to more of your turnip28 series. It really looks like something to dive into. i do hope to see more of these painting video's also. It is really appreciated
it's rare to see a miniature being painted primarily with washes aside from the initial base coats and the terrain paints. I'm impressed on how well the colors pop like that.
Thank you for this. I am going to give your style a go on my South Carolina militia for my rev war campaign . Want them to have a different look and this should do it. Thanks again and much respect…..Dan’l
This was really cool. I've been working on new painting techniques in my spare time, and painting with almost nothing else but washes is something I have only recently tried doing. I still have a bit of a way to go on getting it to work for me, so this has been pretty helpful. I might go back and give the wash painting method a try again soon, seeing how good the results can be.
Sounds great! It can work great off a drybrush or rattlecan preshade, too. Haven't tried other company's wash ranges yet but there's other options beyond gw's colors.
@@CementSaul I usually make my own washes. Takes a lot of practice to get the consistency correct, but the washes work pretty well and I can get the colors I want. I usually do a drybrush pre-shade myself, cause I don't have a spray booth of my own. Still working towards getting one set up, but the drybrush works really well. I have a group of alien mercenaries for Five Parsecs sitting on my table that I needed ideas for. Though, with only 2 turns left, it almost seems like I'm a bit late on that one, haha. Maybe have them ready for next game. This should be a fun new trick for painting. Thanks for showing it!
Terrific workflow, love it, reminds me of Matt DiPietro/Marco Frisoni/Dana Howl. One thing that surprised me was the use after the Titanium White of Vallejo white primer, isn't that super opaque? I would have thought something like Liquitex white ink or a diluted normal white would give a smoother gradient. Cheeky choice of song, too!
Yea if you want a more gentle gradient the inks are definitely better for it, but I didn't need a particularly smooth one for these so a quick blast with the primer after a drybrush does the trick.
looking forward to more of your turnip28 series. It really looks like something to dive into. i do hope to see more of these painting video's also. It is really appreciated
That's the plan! I've recorded myself painting most of the current regiment.
it's rare to see a miniature being painted primarily with washes aside from the initial base coats and the terrain paints. I'm impressed on how well the colors pop like that.
just discovered this channel and I'm loving it. keep up the good work!
You've helped me take the plunge to 18 to 20mm models. Thank you!
This was pretty damn chill to watch. More mini painting with Academic/Classical music please.
It's a nice change of pace from the densely scripted reviews!
Thank you for this. I am going to give your style a go on my South Carolina militia for my rev war campaign . Want them to have a different look and this should do it. Thanks again and much respect…..Dan’l
This was really cool. I've been working on new painting techniques in my spare time, and painting with almost nothing else but washes is something I have only recently tried doing. I still have a bit of a way to go on getting it to work for me, so this has been pretty helpful. I might go back and give the wash painting method a try again soon, seeing how good the results can be.
Sounds great! It can work great off a drybrush or rattlecan preshade, too. Haven't tried other company's wash ranges yet but there's other options beyond gw's colors.
@@CementSaul I usually make my own washes. Takes a lot of practice to get the consistency correct, but the washes work pretty well and I can get the colors I want. I usually do a drybrush pre-shade myself, cause I don't have a spray booth of my own. Still working towards getting one set up, but the drybrush works really well. I have a group of alien mercenaries for Five Parsecs sitting on my table that I needed ideas for. Though, with only 2 turns left, it almost seems like I'm a bit late on that one, haha. Maybe have them ready for next game. This should be a fun new trick for painting. Thanks for showing it!
Ah yes, devoting oneself to the roots.
Terrific workflow, love it, reminds me of Matt DiPietro/Marco Frisoni/Dana Howl. One thing that surprised me was the use after the Titanium White of Vallejo white primer, isn't that super opaque? I would have thought something like Liquitex white ink or a diluted normal white would give a smoother gradient. Cheeky choice of song, too!
Great sculpts, too
Yea if you want a more gentle gradient the inks are definitely better for it, but I didn't need a particularly smooth one for these so a quick blast with the primer after a drybrush does the trick.
Very nice!
What STLs did you use for the shells?
thing:4847937 on thingiverse!
Long live the Root!
lovely! what are those miniatures???
They're 3d printed digibashes! Monstrous encounters halflings + madox minis napoleonics + turnip28 bascinets + free shell stls + some custom sculpting .