Love your videos, Marco! Future video idea: a brief overview of all the different paints/inks/etc. you use. Would be great to see you discuss their different properties, where you use one over another. I know you try not to be prescriptive, but having ideas for where to start with the different paint types would be helpful for those of us with less experience outside acrylics marketed to miniature painters.
People love talking about the amazing blending properties of oil paints, but I would also like to mention that they are very good for „classic mini painting techniques“. Edge highlighting with oil paints is such a joy, because the consistency and flow is always the same. Also just a bit of paint on your brush lasts forever, no more constantly going back to your palette and cleaning the brush all the time. Painting with oils is not scary at all, go for it :)
@@philipjacobsen6550when you buy oil paints it always says on the tube how well they cover. Sometimes you want more transparent paint, and sometimes a paint that covers extremely well (like for edge highlighting).
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM Hey are the water mixable Windsor & Newton oils the same, I bought a few tubes and realized afterwards that these were something different.
@@afternoondelight6322 Windsor and Newton water mixable oils are a student grade paint. So are the Winton paints that he is using. They have less of a pigment load than artist grade paints. They are cheaper and not quite as much of a pop as artist grades will give you. I think both are a valid options for miniatures, especially if you are new to oils. Try the water mixable oils and then upgrade if you like them. I been using nothing but oils for 10 years.
I've watched this video very carefully, and it gives many important tips, and DEBUNKS some VERY COMMON and prevalent misconceptions, namely: 1) you HAVE to varnish acrylic coats before applying oils and mineral spirits... 2) mineral spirits WILL attack acrylic coats... 3) you CAN'T paint acrylics over coats of oils... these are all FALSE, as Marco points out time after time in his videos. If you watch most other videos about using oils on miniature painting, you see these misconceptions repeated time and time again. If they were true, I think using oils would be very troublesome indeed. It's good to have someone who actually knows what they're talking about. ;) Anyways, you CAN varmish acrylic coats before applying oils as it helps the flow (as Marco shows), but what do you think acrylic varnishes are made of, eh?
"Discovered" oil paints a year ago. Now I cannot work without them. Excellent for blending, weathering etc. Very realistic results - when I don't get overly excited and over do it. Thank you for a lovely video, Marco. Saluti dal Carso.
It would be nice if you explained which colours you use to achieve different effects here. Like @ 14:00, which colours are you mixing. @ 17:40 Which shade over what base colour for the skin. It would be amazing if you did a tutorial explaining step by step what colours you use in the process, and going in depth in mixing, blending and the effects of your choices.
As a newer painter interested in broadening my skills, this was incredibly helpful. Your clear and enthusiastic instructions and advice made me think I might actually be able to use oils to up the quality of my final product. Thank you, my friend.
I am a beginner and I've gotten my shaders and drybrushing, and layering, and highlighting down. Just learned about oils so now am watching your vid. Learning is fun! But so is painting after you learn.
I have watched many, many videos about painting models and minis with oils, and this video is the most helpful and informative. Thank you! I feel much more confident about getting oily now. :)
I've been encouraged to try oils a few months ago, and lately I've been experimenting with using a 100% oil workflow on my minis haha. I've started incorporating canvas techniques and adapting them to minis to see how well they work; stuff like "staining the canvas" with a base tone, doing a value sketch prior to applying colors, etc. It's been quite the journey but it's so fun and satisfying when you find a technique that works for you and produces unique results! Thanks a lot for the inspiration and the great tips as always :D
I recently did an oil wash for the first time to achieve a grime effect. What I loved was when i came back in with some GW washes, that the oil layer on the model actually was resistant to the wash. I LOVED the effect. It made it feel far more like the wash was hitting an actual plastic body, and the way it separated and pooled was super interesting. I had never considered how the acrylic would work ontop of the oil layer, but the effect was cool and interesting and instead of varnishing it away i kept it, and my final acrylic washes ended up having a great and natural pooling effect and not just seeping down into the layers below. I love finding cool interactions and oils have really opened my eyes to how you can use the various properties of both acrylics and oils to get a wide range of results that the mediums dont achieve alone.
Marco, as always, your videos have taught me more about painting then any other source (book or video). Thank you once again. Please continue the excellent work you already do.
I needed this vid. The clear laying out of a simple practical setup that works, and why helps. It may seem simple or obvious but I've changed how I work and it really helps. Watching it (just after the Wurmspat too) one thing really leaps out, it's important Marco. I understand the need to produce well constructed, well edited, professional quality vids. They represent you and the project, they need to be this great, they need the specific structured content in order to be teaching using a remote media. BUT Marco that section at the end of just watching you paint, just play around with tones, transitions, blends on the figure was marvellous, it had an enormous value to my oilwork in itself. Sometimes as well as absorbing the theory and the approach you just need to also see it at work too. That leg transformed five or six times, it was like watching really good closeup magic. I needed to see that by using just tiny amounts of paint I can do that to keep refining and just overpaint mistaken choices of colour into the better results I'd hoped for. Seems obvious but to a less confident painter it was transforming. So long as I just use sheens of new paint and don't ever cake it! I've a hand tremor from a spinal issue and I need to fix and rework my stuff a lot. The love of painting really doesn't suit it! Frustration and disappointment makes me put down my brush a lot. You teaching me a much more forgiving technique is an extraordinary gift mate. Please seriously consider a new class of vid, mark the category clearly to separate them from the main brand, but please just show us you painting. Whatever you're doing, and of course competition entries and other stuff needs to be private but you've said in the past you paint every day - please show us as much as you can stand to of it. As the painter you are I don't think the extraordinary value of it to learners would occur to you. Don't worry about the editing - it's the brushstrokes Don't worry about skipping the stuff where setting up the camera to cover another part of the process would waste time and be a pain. Just dump out all you can stand to, marked clearly as unedited, raw footage and entirely separate from your tutorial work. Putting them behind the patreon wall like you did with the Wurmspat would keep it from distorting outside impressions of the brand. We're all already sold on the Marco project! Please Marco, we just need to see and learn from/get inspired by the everyday magic. Plus I now have three glass palettes that came out of picture frames from the charity shop (had to burn the pictures of kittens as shepherdesses though so the binman wouldn't ever see them). That also means I can lay my bits of paper under them with previous successful tones and transitions to use as reference targets. From now on I'll record them on strips cut to fit across the palette! Practical evolution of my table by the power of NJM
😁😁😁 Awesome! It can definitely be a thing to implement on Patreon; TH-cam and the majority of TH-cam users look for short, extremely focused videos but it can be cool on another platform. I'm thinking more to a steaming format, maybe on Twitch and record the session at the same time...
I totally agree. Ive watched all your videos but the most I learned from you with oils is youy brush strokes and palette. James Wappel does a lot of work with oils as well in a long 3+ hour format he initially started on TH-cam but moved to twitch because of the difficulty with live streaming. All he does now is live stream his painting session, then posts recordings of it for his patreon supporters and sometimes to TH-cam to build up his audience. You both work very differently with oils. It's especially neat to see the different styles.
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM Please do it Marco, there's so much to be learned from watching you develop the effects and it's also a huge inspiration to just go for it. Twitch might really be the right place, TH-cam is great for what it does best but when that's not the case then we'll just follow the magic
Great video as usual! Using oils is a lot of fun, but there is a lot to learn and get used to when you first start out. To those that are interested in learning more I would also suggest watching Dmitry Fesechko's videos, and in his comment section he answers a lot of questions about which paints to try etc. Thank you Marco for putting these videos out every week.
Thanks!!! Oh yeah, totally agree, Dmitry is an absolute master with oils. I learned the basics from Kirill Kanaev and Danilo Cartacci and if you find any of their videos and real life workshops they are pure gold
I only had to watch 2 videos on your channel to know you are my favorite painter of all time! Thank you so much for the effort you are putting into these tutorials! I love you!
If you cannot get access to odourless white spirit, use baby oil. We use it in the studio with 10-12 students and there is no smell and it cleans brushes and dilutes washes just as well :)
Hi Sam, I'm just trawling through Marco's comment section at the mo and stumbled upon your potential gem of info. Does baby oil reactivate oil paints in a similar way to white spirit? I'm interested as I've dabbled in oil painting, however I've been trying to use non toxic products wherever I can (like experimenting with lavender oil as a drying agent, it kinda worked and my miniature smelt great as well, haha). Cheers
Very solid video with extremely useful information. The one thing I would add is that you really don't want to just throw the wipe rags into the trash and discard them. The drying process that the oils go through is exothermic and if confined the rags can spontaneously combust. This can make for really interesting stories, but is otherwise contraindicated. 8-) Set the rags out to dry before discarding them. When dry they should be safe.
I have seen other videos of you doing this but didnt quite understand how, but now I do. I was just looking at trying oils for my minature painting and have been watching as many videos of yours as I can
Awesome stuff...my comments below were made before watching the entire video, you addressed everything I was concerned with, great stuff!!! Thanks again!
Awesome video! In all my years of hobbying, oils are the one thing that I haven't tried. But your guide inspired me to give it a try! Thanks for sharing!
I am a beginner in minature painting and work with the basic acrylics in this Hobby. Blending with this is far in the future in my progressing. But to See this easy and beautiful blends gave me some Paintgasm and fill my Head with various Themes of lightblending and ghosteffects. Thank you very much for this Video and this Tips! I create immediatly a Shopping list! :-D
Oils are making a comeback in a lot of ways. I just started with a set of Williamsburg oils and their quality is amazing. So far really enjoy how easy blending is compared to acrylics. Oils for establishing initial blends, and inks for deeper saturation is a great combo.
This video ties the #1 spot of best miniature painting tutorial on TH-cam, the other ones being all your other videos. Hehe maybe I'm doing too much injustice to the great content that is out there, but every single video if yours teaches me so much.
I keep coming back to this video just to hear you say that oils exist since before the Middle Age and they’re still the gold standard. As an art historian I definitely still have my biases and cling to the idea that they only go on canvases and wood, but thanks to you I keep forcing myself to use this wonderful tool for our Tiny hobby. Thanks again!
Was inspired to give oil paints a try by your Blanchitsu Tech-Priest video. I've been playing with them for a month or so now, and I'm so glad I gave it a try. I may not be making masterpieces yet, but I'm having a lot of fun with them. Thank you for sharing your expertise!
Marco, You are truly an alchemist artist, I've Tried to NMM like a month or more without success, and now after this careful master-class explanation, finally made it in less than an hour. Thank you
Thanks nice thorough video. In my humble experience, though you don't "need" to varnish over acrylic before using oils. It is still a very practical way of proceeding. For example if I use an oil wash or other oil weathering techniques, the oil and solvant themselves might not damage the acrylic layers, but the brushing and/or rubbing does create some damage. Also be careful of the varnish type. As mentioned, the same oil wash will leave less tinge on a gloss varnish than on a satin varnish.
When I learned to paint figures, I learned with oils, as there was a great figure painter in my area who used them. I find them much easier to use and think about than acrylics. It's much easier for me to blend nice skin tones using oils than trying to glaze and blend and layer acrylics.
Found you after watching James Wappel streaming, and you both have me ridiculously excited to try out oils. The thought of not blending against the clock has always kept me in the layering camp. Thank you so much for the info! Also, your voice is 😍😍😍
Thanks for the video :) I have used winton for oil washes but found painting with them frustrating. This video convinced me to buy some artist M. Graham paint I can buy locally. WOW what a difference! The artist oil is smooth and silky and blends on the model so much easier! Using oils are actually fun now :)
Started using enamel paints recently and been wanting to try using oil paints but was too afraid. But this video is giving me more confidence in using them so I'm gonna get some tomorrow! Thank you so much for this video!
Wow!I have watched like days worth of videos about oils but never fully understood the hole thing.But after your video i am finally enlightened.I dunno why your video was a breakthrought in understanding this it is probably your thick accent :D. Keep it up man!Don't really sub to channels but you earned it!
Being able to actually watch you do the whole process of the legs was a HUGE help, and exactly what I was looking for! I think for people that know how, just showing a few steps is enough, but for a beginner to this kind of blending that kind of detailed exampling is absolutely critical. Glad I became a patreon!
Oh that was excellent Marco , I’ve painted pictures in oils for a few years , but never dare to try them on my minis . You have given me the confidence to have a go. Please can we have more vids on this subject🙏🏻
Marco, without doubt your best video to date! Well done! Two corrections: 40-50+ years ago were "oil and enamel". 40 till now have been oils and acrylic! The tri-layer style of painting was in regular use in the Wargaming hobby 40+ years ago - as is evidenced by photos in Military Modeling and Miniature Wargaming magazines.
Amazing....I went out and bought a 51 color oil paint set and got most of the other stuff you featured in your video. Love how you explain it and demonstrate so it makes you feel you can do it. Thanks so much for your hard work and explaining it to us hobby geeks!! You rock keep the videos coming...
I recently moved to oils, only thanks to you. I cant express my gratitude enough. So thank you for this, you are really nicest and most skilled painter on youtube. Thank you for improving my painting skills
This video makes me want to go get some oil paints and start testing it out. A friend uses them for washing, but it would be interesting to try out painting a mini with them, especially the blending from dark to light on armour plates. There's a big box of space marines coming soon that needs their blue.
Just found your channel. Bing watching them all! You are a fantastic artist and teacher. I love your techniques! Can't wait to put them to work on my miniatures. 👍👍👍
Marco, could you please comment or make a video on the use and differences of transparent versus opaque oil paints? (You are a fantastic teacher! Thank you!)
omg, this is amazing. I've been been doing oil painting before mini painting and I've been wanting to use my oil techniques on minis, can't wait to apply this next time I paint minis
Three years later and your video is still inspiring. Great work Marco.
Love your videos, Marco! Future video idea: a brief overview of all the different paints/inks/etc. you use. Would be great to see you discuss their different properties, where you use one over another. I know you try not to be prescriptive, but having ideas for where to start with the different paint types would be helpful for those of us with less experience outside acrylics marketed to miniature painters.
Need to suddenly drop your painting session to help with a fussy baby and hours later come back to a still workable blend? Boom! Oil paints.
That's a huuuuuuuuge bonus!!!
What colours do you feed the baby with? And is it permanent?
stay away from the heavy metals and stick with the earth pigments. They have more fiber and less cancer.@@terrydactyl2077
People love talking about the amazing blending properties of oil paints, but I would also like to mention that they are very good for „classic mini painting techniques“. Edge highlighting with oil paints is such a joy, because the consistency and flow is always the same. Also just a bit of paint on your brush lasts forever, no more constantly going back to your palette and cleaning the brush all the time. Painting with oils is not scary at all, go for it :)
so true man
do you have to use spesific types so the pigments are small enough?
@@philipjacobsen6550when you buy oil paints it always says on the tube how well they cover. Sometimes you want more transparent paint, and sometimes a paint that covers extremely well (like for edge highlighting).
As an American I enjoy listening to you speak. Your videos are very helpful. Thank you for what you do.
Thanks!
Yesterday i bought some oil paints and magically, the day after, there is an awesome video from Marco explaining how to use them.
😁😁😁 Perfect timing!!!
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM Hey are the water mixable Windsor & Newton oils the same, I bought a few tubes and realized afterwards that these were something different.
@@afternoondelight6322 Windsor and Newton water mixable oils are a student grade paint. So are the Winton paints that he is using. They have less of a pigment load than artist grade paints. They are cheaper and not quite as much of a pop as artist grades will give you. I think both are a valid options for miniatures, especially if you are new to oils. Try the water mixable oils and then upgrade if you like them. I been using nothing but oils for 10 years.
@@rmorris4598 WIll the water mixable oils work as pin washes too, or does that only work when using mineral spirits?
I've watched this video very carefully, and it gives many important tips, and DEBUNKS some VERY COMMON and prevalent misconceptions, namely: 1) you HAVE to varnish acrylic coats before applying oils and mineral spirits... 2) mineral spirits WILL attack acrylic coats... 3) you CAN'T paint acrylics over coats of oils... these are all FALSE, as Marco points out time after time in his videos. If you watch most other videos about using oils on miniature painting, you see these misconceptions repeated time and time again. If they were true, I think using oils would be very troublesome indeed. It's good to have someone who actually knows what they're talking about. ;) Anyways, you CAN varmish acrylic coats before applying oils as it helps the flow (as Marco shows), but what do you think acrylic varnishes are made of, eh?
This. Was. Amazing
I've never, ever considered being a Patreon for anything but I'm seriously considering it. Fantastic stuff mate.
😁😍😁
Thank you, you are encourage me to start pinting my miniatures :)!
"Discovered" oil paints a year ago. Now I cannot work without them. Excellent for blending, weathering etc. Very realistic results - when I don't get overly excited and over do it. Thank you for a lovely video, Marco. Saluti dal Carso.
It would be nice if you explained which colours you use to achieve different effects here. Like @ 14:00, which colours are you mixing. @ 17:40 Which shade over what base colour for the skin. It would be amazing if you did a tutorial explaining step by step what colours you use in the process, and going in depth in mixing, blending and the effects of your choices.
As a newer painter interested in broadening my skills, this was incredibly helpful. Your clear and enthusiastic instructions and advice made me think I might actually be able to use oils to up the quality of my final product. Thank you, my friend.
😊🙏😊
I am a beginner and I've gotten my shaders and drybrushing, and layering, and highlighting down. Just learned about oils so now am watching your vid. Learning is fun! But so is painting after you learn.
I have watched many, many videos about painting models and minis with oils, and this video is the most helpful and informative. Thank you! I feel much more confident about getting oily now. :)
I’m so impressed by the high level of professionalism in your videos compared to other, “master” model builders.
Also consider separating brushes between light and dark colours. This assist in keeping the lighter colours unpoluted. Especially yellows
I've been encouraged to try oils a few months ago, and lately I've been experimenting with using a 100% oil workflow on my minis haha. I've started incorporating canvas techniques and adapting them to minis to see how well they work; stuff like "staining the canvas" with a base tone, doing a value sketch prior to applying colors, etc. It's been quite the journey but it's so fun and satisfying when you find a technique that works for you and produces unique results! Thanks a lot for the inspiration and the great tips as always :D
I recently did an oil wash for the first time to achieve a grime effect. What I loved was when i came back in with some GW washes, that the oil layer on the model actually was resistant to the wash. I LOVED the effect. It made it feel far more like the wash was hitting an actual plastic body, and the way it separated and pooled was super interesting.
I had never considered how the acrylic would work ontop of the oil layer, but the effect was cool and interesting and instead of varnishing it away i kept it, and my final acrylic washes ended up having a great and natural pooling effect and not just seeping down into the layers below.
I love finding cool interactions and oils have really opened my eyes to how you can use the various properties of both acrylics and oils to get a wide range of results that the mediums dont achieve alone.
Marco, as always, your videos have taught me more about painting then any other source (book or video). Thank you once again. Please continue the excellent work you already do.
Thanks for this video, it has a lot of good information and gave me the courage to try them in my models! Greetings from Colombia !
Started with oil paints, after 3 days in a warm room i still can activation the paint. It is very satisfying. Thank you
😁😁😁😁😁😁
I needed this vid. The clear laying out of a simple practical setup that works, and why helps.
It may seem simple or obvious but I've changed how I work and it really helps.
Watching it (just after the Wurmspat too) one thing really leaps out, it's important Marco.
I understand the need to produce well constructed, well edited, professional quality vids. They represent you and the project, they need to be this great, they need the specific structured content in order to be teaching using a remote media.
BUT Marco that section at the end of just watching you paint, just play around with tones, transitions, blends on the figure was marvellous, it had an enormous value to my oilwork in itself.
Sometimes as well as absorbing the theory and the approach you just need to also see it at work too. That leg transformed five or six times, it was like watching really good closeup magic. I needed to see that by using just tiny amounts of paint I can do that to keep refining and just overpaint mistaken choices of colour into the better results I'd hoped for. Seems obvious but to a less confident painter it was transforming. So long as I just use sheens of new paint and don't ever cake it!
I've a hand tremor from a spinal issue and I need to fix and rework my stuff a lot. The love of painting really doesn't suit it!
Frustration and disappointment makes me put down my brush a lot.
You teaching me a much more forgiving technique is an extraordinary gift mate.
Please seriously consider a new class of vid, mark the category clearly to separate them from the main brand, but please just show us you painting. Whatever you're doing, and of course competition entries and other stuff needs to be private but you've said in the past you paint every day - please show us as much as you can stand to of it. As the painter you are I don't think the extraordinary value of it to learners would occur to you.
Don't worry about the editing - it's the brushstrokes
Don't worry about skipping the stuff where setting up the camera to cover another part of the process would waste time and be a pain.
Just dump out all you can stand to, marked clearly as unedited, raw footage and entirely separate from your tutorial work.
Putting them behind the patreon wall like you did with the Wurmspat would keep it from distorting outside impressions of the brand. We're all already sold on the Marco project!
Please Marco, we just need to see and learn from/get inspired by the everyday magic.
Plus I now have three glass palettes that came out of picture frames from the charity shop (had to burn the pictures of kittens as shepherdesses though so the binman wouldn't ever see them). That also means I can lay my bits of paper under them with previous successful tones and transitions to use as reference targets. From now on I'll record them on strips cut to fit across the palette!
Practical evolution of my table by the power of NJM
😁😁😁 Awesome! It can definitely be a thing to implement on Patreon; TH-cam and the majority of TH-cam users look for short, extremely focused videos but it can be cool on another platform. I'm thinking more to a steaming format, maybe on Twitch and record the session at the same time...
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM yes, more Marco live streams is must!
I totally agree. Ive watched all your videos but the most I learned from you with oils is youy brush strokes and palette. James Wappel does a lot of work with oils as well in a long 3+ hour format he initially started on TH-cam but moved to twitch because of the difficulty with live streaming. All he does now is live stream his painting session, then posts recordings of it for his patreon supporters and sometimes to TH-cam to build up his audience. You both work very differently with oils. It's especially neat to see the different styles.
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM Please do it Marco, there's so much to be learned from watching you develop the effects and it's also a huge inspiration to just go for it. Twitch might really be the right place, TH-cam is great for what it does best but when that's not the case then we'll just follow the magic
Allwyn: thank you for taking the time and effort to express it so well! I very much agree, and hope to enjoy more MarcoTime!
Just thank you for this awesome tutorial !
Great video as usual! Using oils is a lot of fun, but there is a lot to learn and get used to when you first start out. To those that are interested in learning more I would also suggest watching Dmitry Fesechko's videos, and in his comment section he answers a lot of questions about which paints to try etc.
Thank you Marco for putting these videos out every week.
Thanks!!! Oh yeah, totally agree, Dmitry is an absolute master with oils. I learned the basics from Kirill Kanaev and Danilo Cartacci and if you find any of their videos and real life workshops they are pure gold
Thank you very much. You are just as skilled at composing videos as you are at painting. Almost every question I could think of, you anticipated.
Marco,
the painting hero we need, but not the one we deserve.
Great episode mate
😂😂😂😂
Thank you for helping us opening this door!!!
I only had to watch 2 videos on your channel to know you are my favorite painter of all time! Thank you so much for the effort you are putting into these tutorials! I love you!
😍😁😍😁😍😁 Man, you totally made my day!!! Thank you from the heart 😊 and welcome on board!!!
Wonderful tutorial and you have a very nice accent as well. Many thanks Marco.
😊😁😊😘
Thanks man, I started painting my 2000 point army Ork army with oils because of your Blanchitsu series. Lots of love from Sligo !
😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
TYVM Marco. Got all the answers i needed to give it a try. You are a great guy and really appreciate your time and knowledge. GOAT
If you cannot get access to odourless white spirit, use baby oil. We use it in the studio with 10-12 students and there is no smell and it cleans brushes and dilutes washes just as well :)
Hi Sam, I'm just trawling through Marco's comment section at the mo and stumbled upon your potential gem of info. Does baby oil reactivate oil paints in a similar way to white spirit? I'm interested as I've dabbled in oil painting, however I've been trying to use non toxic products wherever I can (like experimenting with lavender oil as a drying agent, it kinda worked and my miniature smelt great as well, haha). Cheers
@@MaleficMadeMiniaturesunfortunate that they did not respond. I'm interested in this, have you tested it since?
It’s been 3 years and I keep coming back to wash! Settled into a Marco-inspired acrylic-oil workflow. Thank you!!!
😍🤩😍😘😘😘 Thank you so soooooo much to you!!! New ideas and videos coming soon 😉
Very solid video with extremely useful information.
The one thing I would add is that you really don't want to just throw the wipe rags into the trash and discard them. The drying process that the oils go through is exothermic and if confined the rags can spontaneously combust. This can make for really interesting stories, but is otherwise contraindicated. 8-)
Set the rags out to dry before discarding them. When dry they should be safe.
I finally picked up some oil paints and did a couple simple 75mm minis all in oil. Thanks for guide! It was such a joy to use oils on minis!
I was a bit scared of trying oil for minis and this video gave me all the info I needed. Had a very good time with them, thanks
Amazing. Great video. Thanks for all the tips!
Thanks Marco, your channel is a gem! fantastic!!
😊😁😊😘
I have seen other videos of you doing this but didnt quite understand how, but now I do. I was just looking at trying oils for my minature painting and have been watching as many videos of yours as I can
I realy need to get my workstation up!! Ithcing fingers every time i watch a video. Love your videos and thank you for sharing your experiences.
Awesome stuff...my comments below were made before watching the entire video, you addressed everything I was concerned with, great stuff!!! Thanks again!
I'm in your tubez, stealin your sekrits! Seriously, this is above and beyond helpful. Thank you!!
Awesome video! In all my years of hobbying, oils are the one thing that I haven't tried. But your guide inspired me to give it a try! Thanks for sharing!
i turned it to half speed when it was suggested... Marco... your commentary at half speed was the highlight of my week LOL
😂😂😂😂😂😂 s u p e r s l o w
@@MarcoFrisoniNJM hahaha
I am a beginner in minature painting and work with the basic acrylics in this Hobby. Blending with this is far in the future in my progressing.
But to See this easy and beautiful blends gave me some Paintgasm and fill my Head with various Themes of lightblending and ghosteffects.
Thank you very much for this Video and this Tips! I create immediatly a Shopping list! :-D
Another vid for the Favorites list! KD:M model, real time footage & the magic of oils... What a combo! 😍
😊😉😊😉😊😉😘
Oils are making a comeback in a lot of ways. I just started with a set of Williamsburg oils and their quality is amazing. So far really enjoy how easy blending is compared to acrylics. Oils for establishing initial blends, and inks for deeper saturation is a great combo.
This video ties the #1 spot of best miniature painting tutorial on TH-cam, the other ones being all your other videos. Hehe maybe I'm doing too much injustice to the great content that is out there, but every single video if yours teaches me so much.
😍😁😍😘
I keep coming back to this video just to hear you say that oils exist since before the Middle Age and they’re still the gold standard. As an art historian I definitely still have my biases and cling to the idea that they only go on canvases and wood, but thanks to you I keep forcing myself to use this wonderful tool for our Tiny hobby. Thanks again!
This has convinced me to give oils a try! I was worried about the drying time especially, but now I think they are what I need to improve my skillset.
Was inspired to give oil paints a try by your Blanchitsu Tech-Priest video. I've been playing with them for a month or so now, and I'm so glad I gave it a try. I may not be making masterpieces yet, but I'm having a lot of fun with them. Thank you for sharing your expertise!
Marco, You are truly an alchemist artist, I've Tried to NMM like a month or more without success, and now after this careful master-class explanation, finally made it in less than an hour. Thank you
Yes!!! Saving to my playlist! Thank you for being amazing.
This video convinced me to jump into oils. Thank you for bringing such high quality instruction and your great attitude to the mini community!
Amazing Tutorial! Now i need to start using oil paints
Thanks nice thorough video.
In my humble experience, though you don't "need" to varnish over acrylic before using oils. It is still a very practical way of proceeding. For example if I use an oil wash or other oil weathering techniques, the oil and solvant themselves might not damage the acrylic layers, but the brushing and/or rubbing does create some damage.
Also be careful of the varnish type. As mentioned, the same oil wash will leave less tinge on a gloss varnish than on a satin varnish.
When I learned to paint figures, I learned with oils, as there was a great figure painter in my area who used them. I find them much easier to use and think about than acrylics. It's much easier for me to blend nice skin tones using oils than trying to glaze and blend and layer acrylics.
Found you after watching James Wappel streaming, and you both have me ridiculously excited to try out oils. The thought of not blending against the clock has always kept me in the layering camp. Thank you so much for the info!
Also, your voice is 😍😍😍
😁😁😁
I have been writing with oils a bit over the last month and a half and have loved it.
This video has helped me expanded my techniques. Thank you.
Thanks for the video :) I have used winton for oil washes but found painting with them frustrating. This video convinced me to buy some artist M. Graham paint I can buy locally. WOW what a difference! The artist oil is smooth and silky and blends on the model so much easier! Using oils are actually fun now :)
This video, and a demo from a friend to test this in live, have convinced me to test oil paints for my minis.
Thanks for the inspiration.
Excellent video, was waiting for you to make a video about using oil paints with mini's
Thank you for the information great video.👍
thx for the vid i was thinkinh on starting working with oils on my miniatures you are awesome sir!! thx alot!!!
This is so impressive, thank you very much.
Cool, you just save me so much money!
I have ton of oil paint for cosplay weathering, i definitely try to do some wash with it !
Started using enamel paints recently and been wanting to try using oil paints but was too afraid. But this video is giving me more confidence in using them so I'm gonna get some tomorrow! Thank you so much for this video!
Thanks! I am looking forward to playing with oils
Wow!I have watched like days worth of videos about oils but never fully understood the hole thing.But after your video i am finally enlightened.I dunno why your video was a breakthrought in understanding this it is probably your thick accent :D.
Keep it up man!Don't really sub to channels but you earned it!
Being able to actually watch you do the whole process of the legs was a HUGE help, and exactly what I was looking for! I think for people that know how, just showing a few steps is enough, but for a beginner to this kind of blending that kind of detailed exampling is absolutely critical. Glad I became a patreon!
😍😍😍 thanks a million!!! For everything 😁😁😁
Yes! Thank you for the information on mediums ! 😉
Absolutely FAN-TAS-TIC !! Kinda revelation to me... shall try this absolutely !! HURRAH for Marco !!
One of the most informative and useful videos on oil paints. Oil washes here I come 🎉
Oh that was excellent Marco , I’ve painted pictures in oils for a few years , but never dare to try them on my minis . You have given me the confidence to have a go. Please can we have more vids on this subject🙏🏻
Perfect timing, my oils just came in today! Looking forward to playing
Grazie bellissimi video pieni di cose da imparare grazie ancora!
Amazing video man! I’m just starting out using abteilung paints myself for my minis. Thank you!
Davvero illuminanti i tuoi video! Grazie!
this video answered so many questions i had :) thanks!
Marco, without doubt your best video to date! Well done!
Two corrections: 40-50+ years ago were "oil and enamel". 40 till now have been oils and acrylic! The tri-layer style of painting was in regular use in the Wargaming hobby 40+ years ago - as is evidenced by photos in Military Modeling and Miniature Wargaming magazines.
Many thanks from a modeller who’s just launching into oil washes 👌😎 fred
Great teaching video Marco! Just ordered my first oils, so this was very timely for me. Thanks so much!
Thank you for this. This has helped SO much.
I’m sold. I’ve even been using them with some success - thanks!
Amazing....I went out and bought a 51 color oil paint set and got most of the other stuff you featured in your video. Love how you explain it and demonstrate so it makes you feel you can do it. Thanks so much for your hard work and explaining it to us hobby geeks!! You rock keep the videos coming...
I recently moved to oils, only thanks to you. I cant express my gratitude enough. So thank you for this, you are really nicest and most skilled painter on youtube. Thank you for improving my painting skills
Awesome! Thanks for the great explanation.
This video makes me want to go get some oil paints and start testing it out. A friend uses them for washing, but it would be interesting to try out painting a mini with them, especially the blending from dark to light on armour plates. There's a big box of space marines coming soon that needs their blue.
Just found your channel. Bing watching them all! You are a fantastic artist and teacher. I love your techniques! Can't wait to put them to work on my miniatures. 👍👍👍
😍😍😍😍 Thanks a million man!!!
Going out to buy some oil paints today.. thanks!
You are an inspiration Marco, I started playing with oil weathering because of your videos. Maybe I'll start doing more soon.
Thank you so much. Extremely helpful. I can't wait to try my oil paints on minis.
Great intro to oil painting - I have been wanting to give it a go for a while and this gives me the confidence to dive in!
Amazing and really helpful video!
tnx for the awesome video!!! always wont to learn how to paint with oil!!!!
Thanks for the video, Marco!
Very helpful and informative video thanks.
Marco, could you please comment or make a video on the use and differences of transparent versus opaque oil paints? (You are a fantastic teacher! Thank you!)
omg, this is amazing. I've been been doing oil painting before mini painting and I've been wanting to use my oil techniques on minis, can't wait to apply this next time I paint minis