This ruin was once a remote community tucked away in the hills along the ocean shore, but has long since fallen into disrepair. The locals prefer not to speak of the place, but the corpses burned and hung as a warning to any others that approach. The sad tale of this place may not be of great concern however, as new residents have made use of the place and its disturbing reputation...
These Freeguild Cavaliers have been a journey. Over a month from primer to painted, no small amount of cursing over broken flagpoles and missed details, and a mental exercise of finding a variety of colors that work within my existing Greywater Fastness scheme. I’m so, so glad to be done with them. While I think they’re gorgeous miniatures and they’re a delight to assemble, painting them is genuinely one of the most challenging and laborious processes I’ve encountered in all my years in the hobby. Thanks to Games Workshop for the review copy.
More of my finished seraphon featuring a lovely carnosaur proxy from onepagerules the new seraphon are lovely. I think with my skinks and raptadons I might actually have a force to play with if I do get the chance.
Easy green/turquoise marble for warhammer(or any other miniatures)
Fast tutorial of how i do the green marble on my thousand sons/tzeentch stuff! No airbrush needed
Citadel paints
Start off with a terradon turquoise(contrast) coat over a light grey(gray seer works wonders for this)
Paint highlights with gauss blaster green on the plates, as if they were gemstones, using a very rough dotted pattern
Do a fat glaze with incubi darkness towards the dark areas(again as if they were gemstones, usually the center parts of the plates)
touch up the highlights, with a smaller dotted pattern, with sybarite green
Add cracks and extreme reflective points(the points with most reflected light, like the center of the shoulderpads, or next to the gold triangles' point on these plates) with baharroth blue
Do a glaze with kabalite green towards the highlighted parts , and with incubi darkness towards the darkest parts,and also add a black line next to some of the cracks as well
Sending 2023 out with a bang! The Ironweld Great Cannon, kindly provided to me by Games Workshop for review. A delightful model to build, often comfortable and easy to paint, but one that definitely benefits from subassemblies.