Showing posts with label Painted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Painted. Show all posts
Friday, February 7, 2014
Mice and Mystics - Roaches
It's been a while, so to shake off the dust and work out the kinks, I've gone for a simple project for this post.
Mice and Mystics, Roaches.
Bask in their buggy, verminous glory!
Simple color scheme, but fun to paint. I did some research on roaches before I started, but they turned out much more realistically colored towards the reference material than I had intended them to be.
The detail on the roaches (as well as on the rest of the Mice and Mystics figures) was really nicely done - even down to the "feathered" bits on the feet and legs.
Speaking of the legs, if I had one piece of advice to give others attempting to paint these guys, it would be to choose how you want the base of the model to look from the very beginning, and then paint that color in-between the legs first. The legs are very closely spaced together so when I went back to paint the base black, I made a mess of the legs trying to paint between them, and had to touch up the roach itself after I was done.
I'm going to be finishing up the rest of the Mice and Mystics miniatures before I move on to any other game figures, in preparation for a side project that I will be announcing soonish....I hope.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Mansions of Madness - Cult Leader
Many real world things have happened over the past two weeks
that have kept me from hobbying, but things should settle soon into a
comfortable balance. In the meantime, here's a quick Mansions of Madness update.
My last MoM update was the Cultists, so I thought I’d finish
off the motley-but-stylish crew of unholy worshippers by painting up the Cult
Leaders.
A bit of a rush job, and I’m still fighting with the details
on the MoM figures, but whatever – I’m not a fine display quality painter, and
these aren’t fine display quality miniatures, so on the board they should work
great.
I’m happy with that.
One thing that I'm finding to be really strange with the MoM figures is the varying proportion and scale between the human characters in the set - odd sized heads and hands, and a weird slightness or thinness that some of the figures have compared to others. The Cult Leaders, for example, are much more slight than their followers, the Cultists, and they tend to look pin-headed compared to them.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Blood Bowl - Beast of Nurgle
Blood Bowl is one of my all-time favorite games.
Although I rarely get to play it, it’s a game that I
constantly return to whenever I get the urge to convert or paint something new
and different simply for the joy of it.
Blood Bowl is one of those “love it, or leave it” kind of
games, with very little middle ground in-between. Part skirmish game, part
board game; it’s a tough sell to new players for a number of reasons—an
overwhelmingly rabid fanatical fan base, a steep learning curve on strategies
and mechanics that are highly situational, and the lack of support by the
game’s parent company…there’s a lot going against the game. If it wasn’t for
the support of the fans, players, and third party manufacturers, Blood Bowl
probably would have died off years ago.
It also doesn’t help the casual newcomer that the game is so
strongly tied to the painting and modeling hobby. Converting your team is by no
means absolutely necessary, but in most settings painting is either strongly
encouraged (leagues) or required (tournaments), and a majority portion of Blood
Bowl players are accomplished hobbyists, who take great pride in creating
custom teams with custom themes.
I’ve personally never been much of one to heavily theme my
own teams, but painting and converting my figures are at the top of my list
when it comes to Blood Bowl. In fact, I won’t field a team unless it’s complete
and painted.
The last game I played had the dual distinction of also
being the least enjoyable—not because I played poorly (I didn’t), or because
the dice didn’t go my way (pretty average rolling), but because my opponent
brought an unpainted, unprimed, bare metal team to the field, made up of
figures whose sculpts I was unfamiliar with, and thus couldn’t tell which
positionals were which (I suspect he had trouble with that determination
himself, since, when I had to constantly ask, “Which player in this dog pile
has guard?”, the piece in question seemed to move around a lot, even though our
teams were in a standstill on the pitch).
The fact that this was league play, and he had played the
team enough to skill a number of his players up meant that he should have had
enough time to paint his team—and in Blood Bowl especially, even two colors on
a figure is just basic respect for your fellow coaches.
So, I always paint my teams before I field them. Simple as
that.
My latest Blood Bowl obsession has been to create a Nurgle
team. I can’t explain why, but I’ve always had an obsession with Nurgle going
back to my early days of WFB, Rogue Trader, and Realm of Chaos. Don’t know
why—I’ve just always thought Nurgle was cool.
Nurgle teams are probably one of the hardest teams to get
good miniatures for. GW makes a team, but they aren’t the best figures (in my
opinion). Taking into account that you have four character types on the team to
deal with (Beast, Nurgle Warrior, Pestigor, and Rotters), and the fact that
they all have the potential to be rotten, diseased, and heavily mutated,
there’s a lot of variability in how to present them, and what miniatures to
get—most coaches will go to other miniature ranges and do heavy conversions to
create their teams.
I have a general plan to kitbash the majority of my own team,
but I thought I’d jump into the extreme deep end of the project, and scratch-build
my own unique Beast of Nurgle.
I’m posting him here, but I’ve actually had the Beast done
for a while.
It was a very long on-again-off-again process of sculpting
him from a Sculpey core, covered and detailed in greenstuff. The fungal growths
on his back are plastic tubing with the edges burnt so they melted and curled
back onto themselves.
The Beast is a big fella, and would take up too much room on
the pitch if I had to place him on his side, so for the Prone and Stunned conditions
I made a “P” and an “S” icon that can be inserted into one of the barnacles on
his shoulder-hump. Likewise, the Really Stupid condition has a “?” icon that
can be put on him to show his status.
The Beast was my first serious attempt at sculpting a figure
from scratch, and I’m pretty happy with him overall. There might be a few
things I would change if I were to do it again, but I’m ready to move on to the
rest of the team.
Friday, September 13, 2013
Mansions of Madness - Cultists
It took me longer than I had wanted to get this first
“official” production post up, but I felt like I needed to really have a good
think about how I was going to approach the workload of painting all of my
board game miniatures in a way that made sense.
On the one hand, I could just plow through one game at a
time until all of the respective figures were painted. This would be good for
keeping the continuity of the posts, and for keeping my head in the painting
mindset of each game’s individual style, but the downside is that it could be
dreadfully boring for me to only paint one style of figure for that long, and I
could get mired in a rut and not enjoy myself.
On the flipside, I don’t want to jump from game to game,
style to style, and have my painting be erratic and disjointed within an
individual game—an inconsistent look between miniatures wouldn’t satisfy me
either.
So, I think I’ve decided to do a bit of a combo approach to
the blog; I’m going to focus on one game at a time to try and keep things on
schedule and on style, but if I need a break from painting mice, or skeletons,
or horrors from beyond time and space, I’ll allow myself that much of a break
to do something else.
One thing I’ve learned over 25+ years of gaming, and a
couple of blogs that started well and ended with a fizzle, is that you have to
keep yourself interested in what you’re doing—otherwise a hobby stops being a
hobby, and starts being a weight around your neck.
Now, with that out of the way, I give you the first of the Mansions
of Madness figures, the Cultists…
Here we have the latest in fashion for the cultist on the
go—the classic black occult robe is given flair for the dramatic with stylish
blue panels, and white trim that says, “Yes, I’m a member of Shub-Niggurath’s
inner sect—deal with it!” Perfect for midnight skulks through the woods,
bringing about the end of mankind, or a somber night around the altar pondering
the impossible geometries of the Outer Gods.
I wanted to paint the cultists first so I could use the repetition
of painting an identical group to get myself used to the level of detail and
the type of plastic of the MoM figures. I’ve primarily played with and painted
Games Workshop figures for most of my gaming life, and switching to figures
that are of a non-heroic scale is always an adjustment.
First off, let me say that the MoM figures are good
figures—right out of the box, they’re perfect for a casual board game setting.
Good detail, good sculpts…they look great. But, things get tricky when painting
is brought into the picture.
The plastic that the figures are made of is soft. Really
soft. Because of this softness, clean up of mold lines and flashing required a
different approach than the hard plastics of other ranges. Where you might
normally use a hobby knife to scrape the mold lines away on another company’s
figures, for the MoM miniatures you actually need to cut them away with a very
sharp blade to avoid burring the plastic—and forget about filing; it will just
rip the surface up.
I suspect that the type of plastic also had some effect on
the level of detail on the cultists, where it looked as if some of the finer
details had gotten lost in the molding process, and the same details between “identical”
figures was often varied in how they looked. Of course, I’ve seen some stellar
paintjobs of the MoM figures online, so maybe I just need more practice, but I
felt like I couldn’t get clean lines on the figures because the details
themselves were a bit indistinct.
Honestly though, these are some minor quibbles from a casual
painter—I REALLY love these figures! They all have a ton of character, and
really set the mood when playing a game. I’m looking forward to painting more!
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