I commented on your priming video saying that I'd watched it numerous times. I'd been meaning to come back to you and ask that you make EXACTLY THIS VIDEO, because as much as I wanted to follow the "multi-color airbrush" priming technique, I didn't have the confidence to pick priming colors that would boost my final product. I haven't had the chance yet to watch this one, but THANK YOU for making it. Your visuals are always incredibly clear and easy to follow, and if what I learned about color theory from your priming and ink mixing videos is anything to go off of, this video is going to be absolutely invaluable. Keep it up mate. You are very much appreciated!
Yes! I’m a qualified engineer so I know how you feel but I often find an explanation needs to be broken in order to be memorable and stick. Especially with kids as you’ll know all to well. 🤣👍🏼
As somebody in there 40’s starting the hobby alongside my young son this channel has blown my mind. It’s a very scary world to join at this age when you have less artistic skill than a potato. These breakdown some of those barriers and while it will take years to master the skills to paint having some of this knowledge feels like having no a cheat sheet !! Thanks
Watch Toy Story 3 with your kid. You’ll realise the “potato” has some pretty great artistic skill when replacing his entire body with a tortilla to solve a creative problem! Don’t underestimate potatoes!! 😜👍🏼
Oh man once I saw the blue/orange movie poster thing I could never see anything else. The ubiquity of it is STAGGERING. I've got visual processing deficits that make things like implementing color theory almost impossible for me; videos like this are super helpful. When it comes to creating color schemes I also picked up the Color Cube after seeing Ninjon recommend it. I'm all for getting lost in the weeds now and then but there's something to be said for flipping through a bunch of cards and then just saying "this one" and knowing what you have won't be ugly.
I agree. I’d just be careful of buying all the things creators recommend. I love Jon but a lot of the bigger guys now seem to be hocking products twice per video. And even a colour cube doesn’t tell you what ratio to use those colours. So it can still end up looking garish. 🤣🤣
This is a phenomenal color theory primer, and is going straight into my Mini Painting Advice playlist. I do love your rounded complementary colors, as it fits pretty well with what I've been using. Here's a fun bit of color theory that's stuck with me for years: did you know that in the fashion industry, red is considered a neutral color? It isn't a neutral color in that it doesn't draw the eye, however it will work in any other color scheme as an accent color.
I did not know that about red. And I spent 3 Uni years living with fashion design students. It’s a good shout for clothing although I’m sure a raging bull would argue if you waved red cloth at him. 🤣🤣
The biggest problem I had with RGB colour wheels is the lack of black, brown hues which are everywhere in real world. Using James Gurney's gamut masking on a Real Colour Wheel is the best tool you will ever need.
Theory (θεωρία [theōría]) means seeing, looking, examining, viewing and considering combine that with color, you get to "see color, consider color, view color" lovely video as always!
I always saw it as a “supposition” or an “idea justification” in modern parlance rather than your very accurate Ancient Greek definition. Either way. Still rarely helps paint the voidscarred…🤣🤣🤣👍🏼
@thestateofplay2023 I totally agree with what you said in the video! it's just that while trying to learn music theory, i also learned the meaning behind the word "theory", so when you asked "why is it called that anyway?" i just wanted to type the rough definition of it 😅
@@thestateofplay2023 would be an interesting project for a CMYK lithophane 3d print, Bambu Labs would prob send you all the stuff for free if you can pull it off...
@@Banterbear I could buy one for £2 and take a scalpel blade to it. Apologies if it was lost on you but it was more of an abstract like for the video than an actual commercial promissary statement. Bants of a sort, you understand Banter right?
I'm a designer too. Colour theory is something you learn once in college and then intuit for the rest of your professional career. "Learning colour theory" has become a shibboleth for non-designers who think there's some arcane skill out there that only "real" designers are privy to. They're better off just moving paint around and seeing what looks nice to them. I mean, we're just painting toy soldiers for fun, and for many in the hobby it's the only time in their lives where they'll get a paintbrush out and be creative. So screw rules and theories and "proper" ways of doing things. But if someone absolutely HAD to watch a colour theory video, they should watch this one. Bravo, sir.
My favourite channel, best production, best graphics great presentation. Well done. Please give up your day job and weekly!!! I know it’s not that easy!
Until YT increases my views into the millions I need to stick with my job. And I make game trailers and movie posters so it’s great fun anyway. 😜👍🏼 Sadly Warhammer hobby vids don’t get anywhere near those views. I honesty don’t know how my peer creators can pay staff, to be honest. I’ll do it for fun. Less pressure. More enjoyable. 👍🏼😄
What an awesome video! I can't express how much I appreciate your balance of bringing in the details when necessary and complementing it with a practical, gestalt view of the end goal. Fantastic work; I love it!
Hi Will. Thank you for the content you create. It’s incredible. Like, the internet doesn’t deserve this, how does this exist, please never stop, levels of incredible. I’m very grateful and am now off to join your Patreon.
As someone also with a background in design I've been banging on about colour theory holding people back for ages. You sir, have made this point exquisitely.
I found your channel yesterday and I have been locked into binge watching all your videos, your explanation of color theory has allowed terms and ideas I have been hearing for over a year now to finally make sense but also has opened my eyes to a lot possibilities with my painting. I have already ordered the necessary kit to start my own making my own colors and contrast paints with your inks
There is a book, "Color Problems" by Emily Noyes Vanderpoel, that goes into color theory, how light interacts with colored objects, color combinations and how they work together, and other information about the use of color, and has quite a few 10x10 grids breaking out the proportions of color from real-world examples whose layout confused me until I realized that colors that did not touch in the grid did not touch in the original, so they showed both the colors in proportion and the separation of colors in the original pattern.
@@thestateofplay2023 Because it's centered more around physical coloring, it matches much better to painting miniatures than the RGB illumination-based color wheel. The section on what colored light does to colors gives me ideas for more subtle OSL effects, too.
I actually really like your guides. They work REALLY well when picking the colors to highlight and shade with. You take the dominant, get your base hue for the accents and then use the analogous colors to shade and highlight. Works really well outside of the yellows. It's actually how I de ided on my Sisters of Battle cloth colors. Dark purple shadows, magenta base hue, pale pink for the extreme highlights. It looks hella dope on the mini.
As a relatively new painter, I decided to get the Fanatic Paint set after watching your video about them, and now the whole triad system there makes so much sense. The best practical painting video I've seen!
this has helped me so much compared to probably a hundred other videos i've watched trying to figure out what i want to paint my army. thank you so much for taking the time to make this
THIS IS THE VIDEO I'VE BEEN WAITING ON!!! Lol going back to art school with this one😂😂😂! I'm a tattoo artist for over 20+ years who enjoys this hobby in his free time and well I say that to say even I still learn things every single day. The day you stop learning is the day you stop getting better.
Most of the miniatures I paint are from board games where there is reference art on something like a player board and I'm painting to match that as closely as possible so the figure will be easy to recognize during the game. When I don't have a reference, then I'm likely to start with a color that seems fitting for the subject and then use a book that was recommended in an earlier video to help pick out a color palette and that has worked well for me. But I don't really care about percentages because at the end of the day, I'm trying to make the mini look like it could exist in real life and I'm not going to paint a bunch of random things the same color just to hit that number. In fact, even if I'm using neutrals I don't paint belt, gun stock, shoes, pouches, and hair all the same color... they can all be varying shades of brown and looks a lot better to my eye.
Yeah board game models are cool and help a lot with the guides. And neutrals don’t all have to be the same colour. You can use a 100 browns and tint both the black and white into a million hues. 👍🏼
What a professional channel man - I watched a couple of your videos at this point and went ahead and subscribed and distributed some thumbs up. The quality of your videos are great and the information is understandable! Thanks for taking the time to make them.
Sadly not. Not a vacation. Just a lot of work trying to market and advertise the games industry out of the hole it dug for itself. I can’t believe how many time I now have to say, “but who is your target audience?”…🤣
I just love how you teach others. You have knack for it and are good teacher. Thank you for your video and others. I learnt a lot from them. I even did a little colour mixing laboratory in my house.
Great video! Thank you for being so chill with everything. It is really enjoyable to listen to you speak. Any chance you will be doing a very beginner friendly tutorial where you speak about all the downtimes during paintin? Like how long you need to wait during rattlecan priming or layers to stick before adding a second one. This would be much appreciated since I haven't found anything relatable (or good). Thanks in advance and keep up the good work.
I’ve got a video about priming on my channel. As for second coats of anything wait until it’s touch dry. I know it sounds vague but how long it dries depends on your climate. If its hot it’ll be minutes. If its cold it could be 45 minutes. 👍🏼
Dude this is amazing thank you it really helped alot. Ive been popping in and out watching your videos but definitely worth the sub. Cant wait to see more from you my man.
Great video. I never got colour theory. My wife can look at colours and feel cold or warm. I just see the colour. I liked the explanation of black white and browns and how the can substitute for a colour. I have never seen that explanation before
Thanks for saying. You’ll know from your studies that so many people get trapped with rules and theories when the fun is in the artistic experimentation.
Great vid! Of all the videos I've watched on TH-cam regarding color wheel, I would say yours made the most sense. Had to get that color wheel immediately. I don't know if it is in your wheelhouse, but a video on NMM showing all your steps would be interesting.
Honestly, I can’t stand NMM. I can do it along with wet blending and other techniques I find tedious but when we have metalic paint and speedpaints that can do all these styles much much quicker I just skip them. I look at it like this. In the real world metal shines. So I want it to shine on my models. NMM kills that shine and forces the light from only one direction. Which then looks off from all other directions. And finally, unless NMM is done incredibly and impeccably well, it just looks like crap. Flameon miniatures is by far the best at it. But even he admits it takes stupidly long times to do. Personally I’d rather use that time rolling dice and killing bad guys! 😜🤣
@@thestateofplay2023 Makes sense! Think im gonna try practicing using metal color as a midtown & apply a highlight & shadow with it. I would like to find a middle ground between full out just applying metal color & NMM at least. I want to believe. lol
I was just thinking of a scheme for my Eldar and I was worried I didn’t know enough about color theory. But this made me feel better about just trying something. So far the idea is to be kind of like Space Wood Elves, so dark green and brown as the main colors and a little purple (which kind of fits that 60/30/10 idea). And I also thought it was interesting that on different things I imagine I’d swap which one is dominant. I started on the Guardians as mostly brown with green helmets/shoulders/knee pads/whatever, and purple helmet eyes, gems, etc. But when I move on to the tank, I think that would look better mostly green.
Speaking as a professional designer. What is the most commonly misunderstood about colour theory, and sadly also present in this video, is that the most popular colour harmonies except for monochrome and analogous are merely recepies for grey. We then call them "balanced" and proceed to... break that balance by sticking to another absurds like 60-30-10(-10) rule. This is because we actually don't want our art to be balanced if we want to express anything with it. The message is in the imbalance. Miniatures enthusiast commonly understand this principle when it comes to the sculpt - a balanced sculpt feels static, unbalanced feels dynamic, and those two suit different situations. There are also different degrees of imbalance - e.g. a slight dynamism of a shooting Space Marine vs acrobatic dynamism of a vaulting Harlequin. Your Dreadnought balancing on a toe will look silly, close combat assasin just standing with a pistol will look boring .The other way around the dreadnought will look imposing and assassin agile. The same concept applies to colour palettes. Sticking to the same Harlequin example - 60-30-10 rule applied to a troupe of cosmic clowns treating warzones as their stage for literal plays feels completely innapropriate, especially when applied per model to the army as a whole. Lastly, a simple food for thought: according to colour theory, a carrot is hideous abomination of the rules, as is a forest landscape picture. And yet, neither is usually perceived as ugly.
I can’t disagree with many of your points. As an exec creative director and 33 year veteran designer in the entertainment industry (movie and game marketing) your points are totally valid. But this is the problem. Average Joe, non designer, doesn’t want to delve deeply into colour theory like we have. They want a simple formula for making an army look like an army. Personally I think olive drab army fatigues for our military suck but get why it’s done. One for camo and two for recognising who’s on your side. Sure they could go a different way like a carrot but the practicalities of colour often outway the choices. When it comes to painting armies there’s no message in the imbalance. There’s just a hideous multi colour incoherent mass of minis that do t look like they belong together. I’m all for art as a long standing designer. I applaud it. But I’m also a big fan of simple lessons that all can follow to get models on the table. 👍🏼
Great information. I do like the rounded quad theory. Never really sat down to get an understanding of color theory, saturation, value, etc. until recently. Thank you for the information.
And for reals, great video as always man. I don't paint much nowadays but it's always a treat to listen about your thoughts and experience. Especially because of your previous work, I don't feel like watching another video, where someone discovered a theory on wikipedia and dogmatically tries to adhere to it. Well, and you're quite funny.
Seems this videos couldnt have come st a better time - I'm nearly 30 years out of the game and just fancied starting painting minis again, so this will help me get back into flow no end! Loved the vid on base coating shadows as well, ive always thought black was too severe 👌
This is a great video, and as someone who has watched more than a few color theory videos (both miniature and art presenters) in able to improve and continue to learn…this is the best one. As you said, we are trying to paint piles of shame. 😂
Your rounded compliments are very commonly utilised in fine are take for example under-sketching volumes where you will have the "highest highlight, mids, core shadow and light shadow" that's four "colours" so even if you start in grisaille and then want to move to colour you need to use at least four colours to address shape on a 2d canvas in fine art. Of course we are in three-dee with our minis but due to scale and composition we want to "push" the miniature details for more effect what we call "readability" so we do the same thing. As i understand it colour theory is a guideline to cohesive, harmonious colour as a short cut so you can rough out a composition. in much the same way as you would initially sketch in a limited palette and then employ more colours to reach the effects you really want. Like emphasising the light, or the light source direction or the texture or metallics or what have you. The Beaux-Arts school was all about good solid techniques but you don't want your audience to "see" technique. You want them to see your rendering and be moved. So you first lean the rule but you give that up in the final work and it moves from technical workmanship to ...art.
Absolutely correct! Well put together comment. As a long term student of fine art and a veteran creative director I wholeheartedly endorse your description here.
@ all the color wheel graphics and the animations make the casual viewer who doesn’t have this background very understandable. God I wish this content existed back in 2002 when I was starting out in 3rd ed 40k…
Great explanation and amazing production, thanks! I often think that colour theoy is one of those things where you have to know the rules to be able to break them.
That’s a very good question. It would probably lean more toward the colour of the accent. Although I always preferred my ground to look like, well, ground. So my bases look like the ground in the game I’m playing. Necromunda has rusty floor for example.
Practical Colourism? I do so enjoy these chats Will, even though I never get a word in edgewise You have such interesting, well presented takes on hobby matters, it's no hardship at all to listen. Really good vid Will, it's given me some better insights,. Seems I've always underused desaturation to set aside colours without losing the shape om on the colour wheel - Which just leads to "sod the colour wheel" and just pick!
Great video as always Wil, insightful, helpful and a lot easier to understand then just a round wheel full of different colours. Love the idea of various colours instead of pinpoints, as this allows a much wider choice of colours rather than (oh i have to use this colour as this is shown on the wheel) also allows for variation. i think my biggest gripe with armies is people take the box art as gospel, instead of a starting point.( its your army paint it how you want)... sorry soapbox moment over... again great video, love watching your stuff and learning stuff too.😁
I agree with you. Box art is often cool, sometimes even the best harmony but we do t all buy the same colour car. So our squads and armies should also be unique to us. 🤣🤣
I usually use the rule of 3. A dark colour (black, brown, grey etc), a light colour (white, bone etc) and a saturated colour. Obviously a spot colour for eye lenses or plasma guns but it usually works
This video is so great. I just bought colore wheel and its greate but past 2 year i’ve been painting my tzeentch army. And to be honest my colours came out in rounded triangles colours scheme. Some models have different colour tints depending on unit, one models use purple other magenta and the look coherent together
Hi Will. It's strange but only yesterday I thought that we hadn't had a video from you for a while. Thank you so much for the best "colour theory" explanation video I have ever seen 👍👏. As someone with a very technical background (physics and computers) I never took art classes beyond early secondary school and all I know about this subject has come from TH-cam videos. However, following "the rules" never sat very well with me as I felt that they were too restrictive. Thank you for releasing me from the shackles and validating me going "off piste" a bit! This has been the most interesting and informative video I have ever seen on the subject and I will save it to refer back to. It is also nice to see "colour" spelled correctly in the background 😉. Just one more thing, it may be a new toy, but you don't need the second camera angle - the cuts are distracting and come across as a gimmick. Your excellent and amusing delivery to the front camera is all I feel is needed 👍👏
Thanks for that! Yeah the new camera is actually for stabilised gimble shots in the future but I thought I’d have a play. Right now I neither disagree or agree as I’m still wondering what to do with it - but aren’t so keen on the angle.
Thank you for the video. I came across your channel from your Priming video, and it really inspired me for my next few projects making my Salamanders and Dark Kraken (Successor Chapter) Armies.
I've bought multiple brands of "process" cyan and magenta acrylics, and they're all much darker than any representation I've seen on colour wheels, and even the example on wiki article of process magenta. I understand that digital CMYK magenta is different to process/printers magenta but surely colour wheels should be closer to the latter? What am I missing? In other words, if I mix 1:1 process yellow and process magenta, I get an orange, not red. If I mix 1:1 process cyan and process magenta, I get a very dark blue/purple.
Because process magenta is just too strong and too opaque. Exactly what I found in my ink mixing video. I had to really thin the magenta to match a colour wheel.
@@thestateofplay2023 Thanks. I'll give that a go, although I may have to do the cyan too. Interestingly, the labels do say opaque for the M and C but transparent for the Y. I wonder why they do that and in teg case of System 3 from Daler, actually sell them as mixing sets.
@thestateofplay2023 It did! I notice some experimentation with new video effects, angles , etc... it would seem as you are like painting miniatures. Doing it with love and the thrive to get better. The content : yeah we needed an engineer to throw some sens into the color "theory". Keep up to it! Please!
@@thestateofplay2023 I don't know about successful or not - it attracts attention! very cool! well, about transitions... the one with glitches makes me shudder every time and check my internet connection... not in a good way haha (no offense, just describing my feelings)
You're videos are really refreshing and I really enjoy your level approach to opinions and directness with the information you share. I followed the link to your website and I've gotta say, please change the background so we can read what you've posted there. It needs a seizure warning 😂. But for real love the content and looking forward yo starting the hobby journey with your community
lots of the space marines feel like Monocromatic with accent, not really enough secondary color to count as a compliment. I kinda like that idea with them being game pieces or units and feels clearer as game pieces that way as opposed to the macro shots of a 2in mini
You’re right. More need secondary colours on shoulders really. But as a real military the “uniform” should probably be entirely one camouflage colour, really. 😜🤣
I've spent all week trying to make Panzer Grey RAL 7201 for my flames of war minis and have stripped a panzer 2 down 5 times trying to get the right grey. Museums have different greys. The best video i've found on the topic pretty much showed most off the shelf paint greys aren't close. But most my trials just look black from 2 ft away. Any advice?
You want my honest answer? Grab some Vallejo or Ak panzer Grey paint. I’m good at mixing but even I give up when looking for a very specific military shade. 👍🏼
@@thestateofplay2023 Hahaha, thats the one I had started with. Funny to go full circle. I just started the hobby so will be checking out your other videos for more tips. Thanks for the reply.
You should make a digital version of a color wheel for mini painters, make it accessible for your patreon subs... Just discovered your channel, enjoying your content so far
I thought this was how you were meant to use it. Some of that may have came from me just choosing a paint that sort of matched rather than bothering to mix or go out and buy a new one.
@@thestateofplay2023do you just select the area thst you want to modify and fill it with a new color or like use an effect overlay? Would be cool to see a video of you doing this
Painting mini's is up to the individuals that bought the mini's and see them in a different light. Afterall who states that every world will have what we know as day and night in the colours we reflect on? Surely worlds can have different hues so therefore mini's taking on different shading concepts. See what I mean, everyone has his or her own concept to general rules of adaptation.
Atleast thinking of color theory this way with curved points rather than sharp ones, it helps avoid color paralysis. It's to easy especially with a wargame hobby to just "forget it I'll try to copy the box art" because they did the mental work for you and thinking of color theory as less rigid than school art class usually taught it makes it easier to create your own schemes for your army.
Our eyes have 3 types of cones, which detect different wavelengths. Thus, there are 3 primary colours for light. For paints, which reflect or absorb white light, there are 8 primary colours. (2^3) Thus any "colour wheel" is limited, like a 3D object can't be fully depicted on a 2D plane. The colour cube, though. Why don't we call it that?
Correct. But try teaching a child or a new painter how to pick a colour scheme for a Cave Troll using a 3D colour cube when they don’t already have the knowledge required to even understand the problem.
so in short, you see theories as useful aproximations. starting points that you dont have to strictly follow, but helps you to find a general direction with leeway instead of being bogged down by infinite choices. “rules are meant to be broken, but they are a good starting-point anyways”
I commented on your priming video saying that I'd watched it numerous times. I'd been meaning to come back to you and ask that you make EXACTLY THIS VIDEO, because as much as I wanted to follow the "multi-color airbrush" priming technique, I didn't have the confidence to pick priming colors that would boost my final product.
I haven't had the chance yet to watch this one, but THANK YOU for making it. Your visuals are always incredibly clear and easy to follow, and if what I learned about color theory from your priming and ink mixing videos is anything to go off of, this video is going to be absolutely invaluable.
Keep it up mate. You are very much appreciated!
Yes I remember your comment mate. Welcome back! I hope this one helps in the same way.
60/30/10/10 made me snort as a math teacher, but makes complete sense in this context
Yes! I’m a qualified engineer so I know how you feel but I often find an explanation needs to be broken in order to be memorable and stick. Especially with kids as you’ll know all to well. 🤣👍🏼
@@thestateofplay2023 : What kind of engineer?
Mechanical
@@thestateofplay2023 Hey me too!!!
As somebody in there 40’s starting the hobby alongside my young son this channel has blown my mind. It’s a very scary world to join at this age when you have less artistic skill than a potato. These breakdown some of those barriers and while it will take years to master the skills to paint having some of this knowledge feels like having no a cheat sheet !! Thanks
Watch Toy Story 3 with your kid. You’ll realise the “potato” has some pretty great artistic skill when replacing his entire body with a tortilla to solve a creative problem!
Don’t underestimate potatoes!! 😜👍🏼
Oh man once I saw the blue/orange movie poster thing I could never see anything else. The ubiquity of it is STAGGERING.
I've got visual processing deficits that make things like implementing color theory almost impossible for me; videos like this are super helpful. When it comes to creating color schemes I also picked up the Color Cube after seeing Ninjon recommend it. I'm all for getting lost in the weeds now and then but there's something to be said for flipping through a bunch of cards and then just saying "this one" and knowing what you have won't be ugly.
I agree. I’d just be careful of buying all the things creators recommend. I love Jon but a lot of the bigger guys now seem to be hocking products twice per video. And even a colour cube doesn’t tell you what ratio to use those colours. So it can still end up looking garish. 🤣🤣
@@thestateofplay2023 I'm American. Garish is our stock in trade.
Well you have all the same colours in your flag as the U.K. but you guys managed to make yours look cool. 👍🏼😄
This is a phenomenal color theory primer, and is going straight into my Mini Painting Advice playlist. I do love your rounded complementary colors, as it fits pretty well with what I've been using.
Here's a fun bit of color theory that's stuck with me for years: did you know that in the fashion industry, red is considered a neutral color? It isn't a neutral color in that it doesn't draw the eye, however it will work in any other color scheme as an accent color.
I did not know that about red. And I spent 3 Uni years living with fashion design students. It’s a good shout for clothing although I’m sure a raging bull would argue if you waved red cloth at him. 🤣🤣
The biggest problem I had with RGB colour wheels is the lack of black, brown hues which are everywhere in real world. Using James Gurney's gamut masking on a Real Colour Wheel is the best tool you will ever need.
Yes, I totally agree.
Theory (θεωρία [theōría]) means seeing, looking, examining, viewing and considering
combine that with color, you get to "see color, consider color, view color"
lovely video as always!
I always saw it as a “supposition” or an “idea justification” in modern parlance rather than your very accurate Ancient Greek definition.
Either way. Still rarely helps paint the voidscarred…🤣🤣🤣👍🏼
@thestateofplay2023 I totally agree with what you said in the video!
it's just that while trying to learn music theory, i also learned the meaning behind the word "theory", so when you asked "why is it called that anyway?" i just wanted to type the rough definition of it 😅
Appreciated!!
You should make a physical of your colour wheel and take my money, the square money not the rounded stuff!
🤣 🤣🤣 I’ll be putting digital files on my Patreon tomorrow
@@thestateofplay2023 would be an interesting project for a CMYK lithophane 3d print, Bambu Labs would prob send you all the stuff for free if you can pull it off...
You can just Google one and print it off?
@@Banterbear I could buy one for £2 and take a scalpel blade to it. Apologies if it was lost on you but it was more of an abstract like for the video than an actual commercial promissary statement. Bants of a sort, you understand Banter right?
You can.
I'm a designer too. Colour theory is something you learn once in college and then intuit for the rest of your professional career. "Learning colour theory" has become a shibboleth for non-designers who think there's some arcane skill out there that only "real" designers are privy to. They're better off just moving paint around and seeing what looks nice to them. I mean, we're just painting toy soldiers for fun, and for many in the hobby it's the only time in their lives where they'll get a paintbrush out and be creative. So screw rules and theories and "proper" ways of doing things. But if someone absolutely HAD to watch a colour theory video, they should watch this one. Bravo, sir.
🤣🤣I was waiting for you to tear me a new one but you didn’t, so thanks for that!
My favourite channel, best production, best graphics great presentation. Well done. Please give up your day job and weekly!!! I know it’s not that easy!
Until YT increases my views into the millions I need to stick with my job. And I make game trailers and movie posters so it’s great fun anyway. 😜👍🏼
Sadly Warhammer hobby vids don’t get anywhere near those views. I honesty don’t know how my peer creators can pay staff, to be honest.
I’ll do it for fun. Less pressure. More enjoyable. 👍🏼😄
What an awesome video! I can't express how much I appreciate your balance of bringing in the details when necessary and complementing it with a practical, gestalt view of the end goal. Fantastic work; I love it!
Thank you very much indeed. Always nice to know my instruction isn’t useless. Now, you should tell my kids that…😜🤣
Hi Will.
Thank you for the content you create. It’s incredible. Like, the internet doesn’t deserve this, how does this exist, please never stop, levels of incredible.
I’m very grateful and am now off to join your Patreon.
Well, thank you very much for for the compliment! Glad the content is helping you.
As someone also with a background in design I've been banging on about colour theory holding people back for ages. You sir, have made this point exquisitely.
🤣👍🏼. Let’s shout it from the rooftops!!
I found your channel yesterday and I have been locked into binge watching all your videos, your explanation of color theory has allowed terms and ideas I have been hearing for over a year now to finally make sense but also has opened my eyes to a lot possibilities with my painting. I have already ordered the necessary kit to start my own making my own colors and contrast paints with your inks
Wow! Thank you amazingly for watching my stuff. And I glad it made a difference.
There is a book, "Color Problems" by Emily Noyes Vanderpoel, that goes into color theory, how light interacts with colored objects, color combinations and how they work together, and other information about the use of color, and has quite a few 10x10 grids breaking out the proportions of color from real-world examples whose layout confused me until I realized that colors that did not touch in the grid did not touch in the original, so they showed both the colors in proportion and the separation of colors in the original pattern.
Thanks I’ll look that up. Love a new book for my shelves.
@@thestateofplay2023 Because it's centered more around physical coloring, it matches much better to painting miniatures than the RGB illumination-based color wheel. The section on what colored light does to colors gives me ideas for more subtle OSL effects, too.
I actually really like your guides. They work REALLY well when picking the colors to highlight and shade with. You take the dominant, get your base hue for the accents and then use the analogous colors to shade and highlight. Works really well outside of the yellows. It's actually how I de ided on my Sisters of Battle cloth colors. Dark purple shadows, magenta base hue, pale pink for the extreme highlights. It looks hella dope on the mini.
Excellent! That’s what I was hoping my weird advice would help with.
As a relatively new painter, I decided to get the Fanatic Paint set after watching your video about them, and now the whole triad system there makes so much sense. The best practical painting video I've seen!
I’m glad I could help and you liked the fanatic paints.
this has helped me so much compared to probably a hundred other videos i've watched trying to figure out what i want to paint my army. thank you so much for taking the time to make this
If it gets more of your models on the table…I’m happy! 👍🏼
THIS IS THE VIDEO I'VE BEEN WAITING ON!!! Lol going back to art school with this one😂😂😂! I'm a tattoo artist for over 20+ years who enjoys this hobby in his free time and well I say that to say even I still learn things every single day. The day you stop learning is the day you stop getting better.
Half I could help out. But as a tattoo artist I’m not sure you need it…
Best video I've ever seen to even mention colour theory.
Could never understand why everyone was so obsessed with such a rigid system.
Thank you. 👃
I know what you mean. Creativity is more fun when we break things!! 👍🏼😜
Most of the miniatures I paint are from board games where there is reference art on something like a player board and I'm painting to match that as closely as possible so the figure will be easy to recognize during the game. When I don't have a reference, then I'm likely to start with a color that seems fitting for the subject and then use a book that was recommended in an earlier video to help pick out a color palette and that has worked well for me. But I don't really care about percentages because at the end of the day, I'm trying to make the mini look like it could exist in real life and I'm not going to paint a bunch of random things the same color just to hit that number. In fact, even if I'm using neutrals I don't paint belt, gun stock, shoes, pouches, and hair all the same color... they can all be varying shades of brown and looks a lot better to my eye.
Yeah board game models are cool and help a lot with the guides.
And neutrals don’t all have to be the same colour. You can use a 100 browns and tint both the black and white into a million hues. 👍🏼
What a professional channel man - I watched a couple of your videos at this point and went ahead and subscribed and distributed some thumbs up. The quality of your videos are great and the information is understandable! Thanks for taking the time to make them.
Wow! Thanks mate for taking time out to write such a complimentary comment!!
Yay video! I hope your vacation was restful Will.
Sadly not. Not a vacation. Just a lot of work trying to market and advertise the games industry out of the hole it dug for itself. I can’t believe how many time I now have to say, “but who is your target audience?”…🤣
@thestateofplay2023 well I just subscribed. So maybe with my help, and 5k others, you can leave it all behind and laugh while they sink.😆
Oh I’ll laugh anyway. 🤣
I just love how you teach others. You have knack for it and are good teacher.
Thank you for your video and others. I learnt a lot from them. I even did a little colour mixing laboratory in my house.
It’s a slippery slope. First a mixing table. Then a full cupboard. Then an entire room. Soon….you’ll need to move house. 🤣🤣
Thanks for the compliment!
Great video! Thank you for being so chill with everything. It is really enjoyable to listen to you speak. Any chance you will be doing a very beginner friendly tutorial where you speak about all the downtimes during paintin? Like how long you need to wait during rattlecan priming or layers to stick before adding a second one. This would be much appreciated since I haven't found anything relatable (or good). Thanks in advance and keep up the good work.
I’ve got a video about priming on my channel. As for second coats of anything wait until it’s touch dry. I know it sounds vague but how long it dries depends on your climate. If its hot it’ll be minutes. If its cold it could be 45 minutes. 👍🏼
Great video, so many bits to like, but I’m fully on board with 60:30:10:10 rule 😅
👍🏼
Excellent video. Easily the best I’ve seen breaking down colour theory. Love your simple approach. Absolutely something I will put into practice!
Oh man thanks for that compliment. Always feels better knowing people watch and take something away with them.
great video! Thanks man. This got me back to beeing really excited about painting my models again!😊
I hope your channels keeps on growing and growing!
Oh man. Glad to hear you say that. That was the point of my channel, to get people excited about the hobby again!
Dude this is amazing thank you it really helped alot. Ive been popping in and out watching your videos but definitely worth the sub. Cant wait to see more from you my man.
Thanks for saying so mate. Much appreciated!!
Great video. I never got colour theory. My wife can look at colours and feel cold or warm. I just see the colour.
I liked the explanation of black white and browns and how the can substitute for a colour. I have never seen that explanation before
You’re lucky. My wife looks at colours, asks me what I think, I tell her and ultimately blames me when she doesn’t like it.
As a guy who studied some design asssignatures, I appreciate this video a lot.
Thanks for saying. You’ll know from your studies that so many people get trapped with rules and theories when the fun is in the artistic experimentation.
Great vid! Of all the videos I've watched on TH-cam regarding color wheel, I would say yours made the most sense. Had to get that color wheel immediately. I don't know if it is in your wheelhouse, but a video on NMM showing all your steps would be interesting.
Honestly, I can’t stand NMM. I can do it along with wet blending and other techniques I find tedious but when we have metalic paint and speedpaints that can do all these styles much much quicker I just skip them.
I look at it like this. In the real world metal shines. So I want it to shine on my models. NMM kills that shine and forces the light from only one direction. Which then looks off from all other directions.
And finally, unless NMM is done incredibly and impeccably well, it just looks like crap. Flameon miniatures is by far the best at it. But even he admits it takes stupidly long times to do.
Personally I’d rather use that time rolling dice and killing bad guys! 😜🤣
@@thestateofplay2023 Makes sense! Think im gonna try practicing using metal color as a midtown & apply a highlight & shadow with it. I would like to find a middle ground between full out just applying metal color & NMM at least. I want to believe. lol
This was an amazing video. Thank you so much for breaking this down in such a simple to understand manner
You're very welcome! Now on to teaching my 4 year old how to tell time on a ticky tock clock - as she calls it. 😭
Great video, so many bits to like, but I’m fully on board with 60:30:10:10 rule 😅 you are truly a modern day Von gerter. Guerter? Gurtur?
Goethe. 🤣🤣🤣 Thanks!!
I was just thinking of a scheme for my Eldar and I was worried I didn’t know enough about color theory. But this made me feel better about just trying something.
So far the idea is to be kind of like Space Wood Elves, so dark green and brown as the main colors and a little purple (which kind of fits that 60/30/10 idea). And I also thought it was interesting that on different things I imagine I’d swap which one is dominant. I started on the Guardians as mostly brown with green helmets/shoulders/knee pads/whatever, and purple helmet eyes, gems, etc. But when I move on to the tank, I think that would look better mostly green.
I think you’ve got it. Not sure you need any help mate. 👍🏼😄
You are correct. Tbe vehicles will look better green as there’s dominate colour vs brown. This is what my did with his Eldar tanks.
Speaking as a professional designer. What is the most commonly misunderstood about colour theory, and sadly also present in this video, is that the most popular colour harmonies except for monochrome and analogous are merely recepies for grey. We then call them "balanced" and proceed to... break that balance by sticking to another absurds like 60-30-10(-10) rule. This is because we actually don't want our art to be balanced if we want to express anything with it. The message is in the imbalance. Miniatures enthusiast commonly understand this principle when it comes to the sculpt - a balanced sculpt feels static, unbalanced feels dynamic, and those two suit different situations. There are also different degrees of imbalance - e.g. a slight dynamism of a shooting Space Marine vs acrobatic dynamism of a vaulting Harlequin. Your Dreadnought balancing on a toe will look silly, close combat assasin just standing with a pistol will look boring .The other way around the dreadnought will look imposing and assassin agile. The same concept applies to colour palettes. Sticking to the same Harlequin example - 60-30-10 rule applied to a troupe of cosmic clowns treating warzones as their stage for literal plays feels completely innapropriate, especially when applied per model to the army as a whole. Lastly, a simple food for thought: according to colour theory, a carrot is hideous abomination of the rules, as is a forest landscape picture. And yet, neither is usually perceived as ugly.
I can’t disagree with many of your points. As an exec creative director and 33 year veteran designer in the entertainment industry (movie and game marketing) your points are totally valid. But this is the problem. Average Joe, non designer, doesn’t want to delve deeply into colour theory like we have. They want a simple formula for making an army look like an army.
Personally I think olive drab army fatigues for our military suck but get why it’s done. One for camo and two for recognising who’s on your side. Sure they could go a different way like a carrot but the practicalities of colour often outway the choices.
When it comes to painting armies there’s no message in the imbalance. There’s just a hideous multi colour incoherent mass of minis that do t look like they belong together.
I’m all for art as a long standing designer. I applaud it. But I’m also a big fan of simple lessons that all can follow to get models on the table. 👍🏼
This has been such helpful advice for me as I am often stuck with colour selection, but this has just been a light bulb moment for me. Thank you.
Oh cool. I’m always happy when something i say genuinely helps someone out.
Great information. I do like the rounded quad theory. Never really sat down to get an understanding of color theory, saturation, value, etc. until recently. Thank you for the information.
My pleasure mate
And for reals, great video as always man. I don't paint much nowadays but it's always a treat to listen about your thoughts and experience. Especially because of your previous work, I don't feel like watching another video, where someone discovered a theory on wikipedia and dogmatically tries to adhere to it.
Well, and you're quite funny.
I appreciate that! You should paint something though. Even as a stress reliever! 🤣
I'm easily impressionable, so I guess I'll give your method a try once my new edition of Talisman arrives with gray figures!
Awesome! Enjoy!
As always, making the best and most sensible videos about our hobby. Superclass video! Thanks Will
That’s me. Sensible. 🤣 I was aiming for informative but I’ll accept that. 👍🏼😜
@thestateofplay2023 Hahahahaha! 🤣🤣 I mean reasonable!! 😜
I’ll take that too. 😜
Thank you for another brilliant video. I have learnt more about colour from your videos than I ever did from my art teachers.
That’s because art teachers weren’t good enough to be maths teachers so we’re constantly hating their jobs. 🤣🤣 Glad you liked it! 👍🏼
Seems this videos couldnt have come st a better time - I'm nearly 30 years out of the game and just fancied starting painting minis again, so this will help me get back into flow no end! Loved the vid on base coating shadows as well, ive always thought black was too severe 👌
Glad we’re like minded! And also happy that my vids could help. 👍🏼 Enjoy getting back into it and keep me updated.
This is a great video, and as someone who has watched more than a few color theory videos (both miniature and art presenters) in able to improve and continue to learn…this is the best one. As you said, we are trying to paint piles of shame. 😂
🤣🤣 yes exactly painting piles of shame should be fun and not a lengthy lesson in artistic colour interpretation. 😜
Your rounded compliments are very commonly utilised in fine are take for example under-sketching volumes where you will have the "highest highlight, mids, core shadow and light shadow" that's four "colours" so even if you start in grisaille and then want to move to colour you need to use at least four colours to address shape on a 2d canvas in fine art. Of course we are in three-dee with our minis but due to scale and composition we want to "push" the miniature details for more effect what we call "readability" so we do the same thing. As i understand it colour theory is a guideline to cohesive, harmonious colour as a short cut so you can rough out a composition. in much the same way as you would initially sketch in a limited palette and then employ more colours to reach the effects you really want. Like emphasising the light, or the light source direction or the texture or metallics or what have you. The Beaux-Arts school was all about good solid techniques but you don't want your audience to "see" technique. You want them to see your rendering and be moved. So you first lean the rule but you give that up in the final work and it moves from technical workmanship to ...art.
Absolutely correct! Well put together comment. As a long term student of fine art and a veteran creative director I wholeheartedly endorse your description here.
The graphics in this video are top notch! Along with the information being shared makes this a very enjoyable and educational video!! ❤
Thanks mate. Took longer to make this video as I upgraded my edit software and had to… well, learn how to use it. 🤣🤣🤣
@ all the color wheel graphics and the animations make the casual viewer who doesn’t have this background very understandable. God I wish this content existed back in 2002 when I was starting out in 3rd ed 40k…
3 years before TH-cam sadly. You’d have needed a bricks and mortar library back then…😜
Great explanation and amazing production, thanks! I often think that colour theoy is one of those things where you have to know the rules to be able to break them.
Ah! But it’s a “theory” so there’s no rules. 😜
If you do the 60/30/10 on the mini itself, how would you handle the base? Use a neutral that leans towards one of the non-primaries?
That’s a very good question. It would probably lean more toward the colour of the accent. Although I always preferred my ground to look like, well, ground. So my bases look like the ground in the game I’m playing. Necromunda has rusty floor for example.
Practical Colourism?
I do so enjoy these chats Will, even though I never get a word in edgewise
You have such interesting, well presented takes on hobby matters, it's no hardship at all to listen.
Really good vid Will, it's given me some better insights,.
Seems I've always underused desaturation to set aside colours without losing the shape om on the colour wheel - Which just leads to "sod the colour wheel" and just pick!
Ok. Fine. Next time I’ll let you speak. But put your hand up first. And yeah, even I sometimes go “oh bollocks, this colour”. 😜
Great video as always Wil, insightful, helpful and a lot easier to understand then just a round wheel full of different colours. Love the idea of various colours instead of pinpoints, as this allows a much wider choice of colours rather than (oh i have to use this colour as this is shown on the wheel) also allows for variation. i think my biggest gripe with armies is people take the box art as gospel, instead of a starting point.( its your army paint it how you want)... sorry soapbox moment over... again great video, love watching your stuff and learning stuff too.😁
I agree with you. Box art is often cool, sometimes even the best harmony but we do t all buy the same colour car. So our squads and armies should also be unique to us. 🤣🤣
I usually use the rule of 3. A dark colour (black, brown, grey etc), a light colour (white, bone etc) and a saturated colour. Obviously a spot colour for eye lenses or plasma guns but it usually works
But doesn’t that mean you have no bright saturated colours? Which if you’re going grimdark would make sense.
Sanguinius and Fulgrim are the princesses
🤣🤣🤣I see where your loyalties lie.
Best video on the subject I've ever watched. Thanks a ton!
High praise indeed. I thank you.
This video is so great. I just bought colore wheel and its greate but past 2 year i’ve been painting my tzeentch army. And to be honest my colours came out in rounded triangles colours scheme. Some models have different colour tints depending on unit, one models use purple other magenta and the look coherent together
Awesome. I think you get it already. 👍🏼
Hi Will. It's strange but only yesterday I thought that we hadn't had a video from you for a while. Thank you so much for the best "colour theory" explanation video I have ever seen 👍👏. As someone with a very technical background (physics and computers) I never took art classes beyond early secondary school and all I know about this subject has come from TH-cam videos. However, following "the rules" never sat very well with me as I felt that they were too restrictive. Thank you for releasing me from the shackles and validating me going "off piste" a bit! This has been the most interesting and informative video I have ever seen on the subject and I will save it to refer back to. It is also nice to see "colour" spelled correctly in the background 😉. Just one more thing, it may be a new toy, but you don't need the second camera angle - the cuts are distracting and come across as a gimmick. Your excellent and amusing delivery to the front camera is all I feel is needed 👍👏
Thanks for that! Yeah the new camera is actually for stabilised gimble shots in the future but I thought I’d have a play. Right now I neither disagree or agree as I’m still wondering what to do with it - but aren’t so keen on the angle.
This, like your priming video is super useful. Thanks for doing the work for me. I will sit and enjoy my latte.
Send your minis over. I’ll paint them. I mean, it’ll probably be sometime in 2050 just after I finished my own so hopefully you aren’t in a hurry. 🤣
Fantastic video Will! So much good insight. And the Hugh Hefner joke 😅
Thanks again Brenden!!
Thank you for the video. I came across your channel from your Priming video, and it really inspired me for my next few projects making my Salamanders and Dark Kraken (Successor Chapter) Armies.
Glad I could give you some inspiration!
Yes! Always love a new video ❤
🤣 if I had a million people like you….👍🏼😜
@thestateofplay2023 it's my pleasure to watch, I always take something away with me !
Great video. Everyone choosing a paint scheme should watch it. Thanks!
I hope they do. Even if they’re not choosing a scheme too. 🤣
Finally! A color theory video I can understand. Thank you.
Yeah I tried doing it in Klingon but no one understood
I've bought multiple brands of "process" cyan and magenta acrylics, and they're all much darker than any representation I've seen on colour wheels, and even the example on wiki article of process magenta. I understand that digital CMYK magenta is different to process/printers magenta but surely colour wheels should be closer to the latter? What am I missing?
In other words, if I mix 1:1 process yellow and process magenta, I get an orange, not red. If I mix 1:1 process cyan and process magenta, I get a very dark blue/purple.
Because process magenta is just too strong and too opaque. Exactly what I found in my ink mixing video. I had to really thin the magenta to match a colour wheel.
@@thestateofplay2023 Thanks. I'll give that a go, although I may have to do the cyan too. Interestingly, the labels do say opaque for the M and C but transparent for the Y. I wonder why they do that and in teg case of System 3 from Daler, actually sell them as mixing sets.
Haven't seen the video yet, I already love it!😍
🤣🤣 I hope it lives up to it!
@thestateofplay2023 It did! I notice some experimentation with new video effects, angles , etc... it would seem as you are like painting miniatures. Doing it with love and the thrive to get better. The content : yeah we needed an engineer to throw some sens into the color "theory". Keep up to it! Please!
Great video - been wondering where you've been.
Just working. Sadly can’t be a full time TH-camr.
Just the video I wanted. I've been doing down the colour theory and single pigment rby/cmyk rabbithole this week.
Yeah it is a rabbit hole isn’t it. RYB/ CMY. Not much significant difference when choosing colours really. Go with your preferred option
Great video. Super helpful, and confidence building.
Great! That’s what I was hoping for.
Thanks for another great video and going further on the 60 /30 / 10 color scheme rule.
Yeah, 60/30/10 can be a bit limiting - I think.
Brilliant video, edit work is amazing, too!
Thank you for saying so!
aaaa! new video and new camera angle!
Well, finally, I learn something about color theory..
An unflattering camera angle but hey, we move with the times!!
@@thestateofplay2023 I don't know about successful or not - it attracts attention! very cool! well, about transitions... the one with glitches makes me shudder every time and check my internet connection... not in a good way haha (no offense, just describing my feelings)
I didn’t put any glitches. It must be your internet connection….
🤣🤣
@@thestateofplay2023 oh sht…
Really nice video, just what I needed at the moment. Thank you !
Glad I could help
what's the song playing at 2:55?? i must know!
It’s a background track from my Epidemic Sound subscription . Called Polygon. By Ben Elson. Great track!
👏👏👏👏 Very good video! You have videographed my thoughts here!
That’s because I’m secretly reading your mind from afar. 🤣🤣
@thestateofplay2023 Nice 😎
Too many people are married to painting rules. That's the nicest way a can put it. It stifles creativity.
Totally agree!
You're videos are really refreshing and I really enjoy your level approach to opinions and directness with the information you share.
I followed the link to your website and I've gotta say, please change the background so we can read what you've posted there. It needs a seizure warning 😂. But for real love the content and looking forward yo starting the hobby journey with your community
You mean the wiggly lines? Damn I was aiming for seizures! 😜🤣
Heck yeah I've been waiting for this DESPERATELY
Well next time be the “pirate who is loud” and scream me a message. 🤣🤣😜
This is so intuitive. Are you going to make your version of the colour wheel? 😜🙏🏻
I’ve put the files on my Patreon for anyone who wants them. 👍🏼 Shilling a bunch of products I’ll leave to other creators 😜🙏
Really insightful! Thank you for creating it!
No problem!
lots of the space marines feel like Monocromatic with accent, not really enough secondary color to count as a compliment. I kinda like that idea with them being game pieces or units and feels clearer as game pieces that way as opposed to the macro shots of a 2in mini
You’re right. More need secondary colours on shoulders really. But as a real military the “uniform” should probably be entirely one camouflage colour, really. 😜🤣
I've spent all week trying to make Panzer Grey RAL 7201 for my flames of war minis and have stripped a panzer 2 down 5 times trying to get the right grey. Museums have different greys. The best video i've found on the topic pretty much showed most off the shelf paint greys aren't close. But most my trials just look black from 2 ft away. Any advice?
You want my honest answer? Grab some Vallejo or Ak panzer Grey paint.
I’m good at mixing but even I give up when looking for a very specific military shade. 👍🏼
@@thestateofplay2023 Hahaha, thats the one I had started with. Funny to go full circle. I just started the hobby so will be checking out your other videos for more tips. Thanks for the reply.
Sorry I couldn’t be more help. Some colours will always be easier purchased
Brilliant explanation, really helped me and amusing too. Thanks
You’re very welcome!
You should make a digital version of a color wheel for mini painters, make it accessible for your patreon subs...
Just discovered your channel, enjoying your content so far
I did do that. It’s on my Patreon. 👍🏼
60% Super. 30% Shardled, 10% rewatched and the balance is inspiration. Simple.
Nice comment!! 👍🏼🎯
I thought this was how you were meant to use it. Some of that may have came from me just choosing a paint that sort of matched rather than bothering to mix or go out and buy a new one.
It is. Sort of. Many are adamant that you should change the colours exactly specified in the harmony but hey it’s supposed to be fun.
I painted my space marines quartered turquoise and puce. Didn't realise I was using colour theory, just thought they looked cool 😅
And that’s the goal no matter how you get there!
This was AMAZING, thank you!!
Anytime! Well I say that but really I mean, “when I can do it”. 🤣🤣😜
bravo, good sir bravo. this is a great and funny video. oh, and I learned some stuff too, I guess, which is a nice bonus👍
Laugh first. Learn second. Maybe. 🤣😜
What program do you use to create the color mock-ups of the figures? I want to test out a few color options for a project I’m on
Photoshop
@@thestateofplay2023do you just select the area thst you want to modify and fill it with a new color or like use an effect overlay? Would be cool to see a video of you doing this
It’s effectively a paintbrush over the area and tidied up with an adjustment overlay. 👍🏼
Excellent video - thank you.
Glad you liked it!
3:14 But we do want a video on colour harmony ... A musical video
With singing and dancing and a full on Baz Luhrmann routine? Folie a Grimdeux
Will is so damn professional.
I’m sure I could find a few old bosses that might disagree. 🤣🤣😜
Painting mini's is up to the individuals that bought the mini's and see them in a different light. Afterall who states that every world will have what we know as day and night in the colours we reflect on?
Surely worlds can have different hues so therefore mini's taking on different shading concepts. See what I mean, everyone has his or her own concept to general rules of adaptation.
Very good point. Earth light might not be the same as Necromunda light. 👍🏼
Brilliant viewing. Great video.
I thank you
Atleast thinking of color theory this way with curved points rather than sharp ones, it helps avoid color paralysis. It's to easy especially with a wargame hobby to just "forget it I'll try to copy the box art" because they did the mental work for you and thinking of color theory as less rigid than school art class usually taught it makes it easier to create your own schemes for your army.
Exactly. Totally. 100% and many other affirmations I can’t think of yet. 😜
Fantastic explanation. Seriously.
Thank you dear sir. I guess You’re serious. 🤣👍🏼
Our eyes have 3 types of cones, which detect different wavelengths. Thus, there are 3 primary colours for light.
For paints, which reflect or absorb white light, there are 8 primary colours. (2^3)
Thus any "colour wheel" is limited, like a 3D object can't be fully depicted on a 2D plane. The colour cube, though. Why don't we call it that?
Correct. But try teaching a child or a new painter how to pick a colour scheme for a Cave Troll using a 3D colour cube when they don’t already have the knowledge required to even understand the problem.
Colour me shocked. Also, very useful info, so cheers!
🤣🤣 touché my good sir!!
Oh I'm stealing that hugh Heffner line😂😂😂😂😂😂
🤣 it’s yours mate!
so in short, you see theories as useful aproximations. starting points that you dont have to strictly follow, but helps you to find a general direction with leeway instead of being bogged down by infinite choices.
“rules are meant to be broken, but they are a good starting-point anyways”
Essentially yes. If that’s what you took away then I’m happy! 😄
I mean some of us do use this when we airbrush.. a dark green, lighter green, even lighter green.. so we are playing, just maybe not noticing it.
Exactly. Some people however are not using it and also not noticing. 🤣🤣
Excellent video!
Thanks!
They really should add princesses!
They’re probably trying. It’s now 2025 after all…