Bailey
A Fixture
I'm working on a 54mm barbarian figure from Olivier Bouchet. The sculpt is called Gokan, the Guardian, but it has a striking resemblance to the comic book character, Slaine. So that's how I decided to go about painting him. This whole project is part of a paint along over at CoolMiniOrNot
http://www.coolminiornot.com/forums/showthread.php?58625-Gokan-group-painting-competition
The paint along just started so there's still plenty of time to join in. If you're interested in it or just like the figure you can find it at the sculptor's website
http://ob-sculptures.blogspot.se/2014/09/gokan-guardian.html
Here's the current state of the figure. I've done the skin and tartan. I'd like to do some Celtic style tattoos, but I haven't taken the plunge yet.
For the tartan pattern I used a tutorial I found on here a few years ago
http://www.planetfigure.com/threads/painting-tartans.15814/
Tartans seem really intimidating, but if you break the pattern down and take it one set of stripes at a time it really isn't that bad. I started with a base coat of the orange background color. Then I focused on the largest stripes, the brown ones. I laid down the horizontal ones, using the top of the kilt as a guide (since the bottom is jagged). Try to keep the thickness and spacing consistent, but follow the contours of the cloth. With those done I went back and painted the verticals stripes.
Next I added the dark brown squares wherever the two stripes crossed
With the major features done, I went in and did the shading and highlighting. This is also the stage to clean up the edges and lines as needed.
The pattern looks decent but now it's time to add more detail. Move on to the next most significant stripes. In this case it was the two thin stripes on either side of the thick ones. Use the first set of stripes as a guide to lay down the next set. And wherever they cross the other brown stripes I switch to the darker brown color.
And we keep going, adding each layer of stripes one at a time (from biggest to smallest). The last set here are the horizontal white stripes and the vertical yellow ones. I mix them with a bit of the orange or the brown, depending on which section of the pattern they are in.
And that's it. Just break down the pattern and take it one step at a time. If you can paint stripes then you can paint a tartan.
http://www.coolminiornot.com/forums/showthread.php?58625-Gokan-group-painting-competition
The paint along just started so there's still plenty of time to join in. If you're interested in it or just like the figure you can find it at the sculptor's website
http://ob-sculptures.blogspot.se/2014/09/gokan-guardian.html
Here's the current state of the figure. I've done the skin and tartan. I'd like to do some Celtic style tattoos, but I haven't taken the plunge yet.
For the tartan pattern I used a tutorial I found on here a few years ago
http://www.planetfigure.com/threads/painting-tartans.15814/
Tartans seem really intimidating, but if you break the pattern down and take it one set of stripes at a time it really isn't that bad. I started with a base coat of the orange background color. Then I focused on the largest stripes, the brown ones. I laid down the horizontal ones, using the top of the kilt as a guide (since the bottom is jagged). Try to keep the thickness and spacing consistent, but follow the contours of the cloth. With those done I went back and painted the verticals stripes.
Next I added the dark brown squares wherever the two stripes crossed
With the major features done, I went in and did the shading and highlighting. This is also the stage to clean up the edges and lines as needed.
The pattern looks decent but now it's time to add more detail. Move on to the next most significant stripes. In this case it was the two thin stripes on either side of the thick ones. Use the first set of stripes as a guide to lay down the next set. And wherever they cross the other brown stripes I switch to the darker brown color.
And we keep going, adding each layer of stripes one at a time (from biggest to smallest). The last set here are the horizontal white stripes and the vertical yellow ones. I mix them with a bit of the orange or the brown, depending on which section of the pattern they are in.
And that's it. Just break down the pattern and take it one step at a time. If you can paint stripes then you can paint a tartan.