Found 1325 recipes
How I painted my Lawmen Gang for this popular skirmish game. For these lads, I decided that blue-grey cloth, with pops of a cold white would be their identifying colors. The rest of the miniature was populated with pretty neutral or complimentary colours.
My first test model for an entire Idoneth Deepkin army. Painted mostly with 6 paints from AK’s night creatures paint set. This army will have a strong and bright gradient of purple/red/magenta that makes it stand out on the table top.
A deep warm red cloth.
WIP recipes for Games Workshop Galvanic Servohaulers (specifically the large crane)
Vampire skin with good effect of shodow/light areas thank to the contrast of blues (celestra grey, drakenof nightshade) and browns (rakart flesh, carroburg crimson, pallid witch flesh)
My method for painting the gold armour of my small Custode Kill Team. Use an airbrush for best results.
My take on a Alpha Legion descendant warband.
Nugle chaos warriors
A pretty much a direct copy of @micheal_kirkbride (Instagram) tan blood angels. Full credit to him.
He uses an airbrush which I do not own so I've modified the colours from air to layer.
As the title would suggest, this is just an ever growing collection of cloth recipes. I am forever winging something for one of miniatures, so thought I may as well create a resource for whoever may need it.
Ork Kommandos are the elite infiltrators of the Ork warbands, blending brutal strength with surprising stealth. Their gear is battered, their armor chipped, and their skin scarred from countless battles. The challenge of painting Ork Kommandos lies in capturing their raw, rugged look, from the weathered leather to the chipped armor and worn cloth. This guide provides detailed step-by-step instructions on how to achieve a gritty, battle-hardened appearance for your Ork Kommandos, giving them the character and depth they deserve on the tabletop.
This is how I paint a stealth oriented T'au Cadre. The scheme is based on desaturated grey-blues, greys, black, red wine (for some pop), bronze and night vision optics.
The recipe calls for wet blending, glazing, dry brushing and edge highlighting. Feel free to omit these techniques or replace them with one you are more comfortable with
The models are based in an environment resembling the setting of 'Spec ops: The Line', wherein a metropolis is in the process of being buried by sandstorms. These sandstorms are creating an artificial night and creating pockets of poor visibility in the urban centre. With that in mind, where reasonable, I've sculpted (poorly) some camouflage cloaks to protect the units from the sandstorm and provide extra concealment. I've tried my best to make the models look battle-worn and battered, hoping to illustrate the desperation of the situation.
The narrative I had in mind is based on this cadre's fire caste and air caste compliment using ambushes, surgical strikes, assassination, and other cunning tricks to delay an attacking force while the T'au evacuate civilians on a T'au assimilated Imperial world, now fully absorbed into the T'au Sphere, with T'au architecture and technology. The T'au are using an otherwise hostile environment to their advantage, using the sun blocking sandstorms as cover in their Kauyon doctrine to disrupt the enemy formations in a painful defence in depth.
This is the step by step for one of my custom chapters, the Spectral Claws.
These guys are Raven Guard successors, and lean heavily on forward deployment and ambush tactics.
Gotta go fast! This recipe tries to focus on speed and being achievable while still looking nice. The focus is on creating contrast between the light pale skin, and darker leathers and other materials.
My take on the Lifeslayers warband colour scheme.