phil_h
A Fixture
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2016
- Messages
- 2,663
Hello Everybody,
Well after taking a somewhat non-deliberate hiatus from painting for well over two years now, I've finally been able to get back to painting. Essentially, at that time, I had some pretty momentous life changes take place (all for the much, much better), and one of them included leaving my home for well over 20 years in Philadelphia, PA for well... what I'd consider to be a much, much better place. The only downside to all this excitement has been not being able to paint. Now that things have settled and quieted down, I've finally been able to get back to it! (It also didn't help that it's almost impossible to get decent furniture where I'm at now, and the desk for my office/studio took well over a year and a half to finally arrive at the new house.)
Prior to taking my extended vacation, I painted a long series of ancient Greek subjects, and after unpacking and re-organizing the grey army, it turns out that I still have some of them left. This time, it's a series of Spartan hoplites from Big Child Creatives. They're normally known for more fantasy type figures, but I liked that their first foray into a more historical realm had some highly dynamically posed Spartans. Here they are:
While I will be painting all three together, for the purposes of this and subsequent posts, I'll just be focusing on the guy in the middle, the "Noble".
Here he is all prepped and ready for assembly:
As can be seen, everything is well cast and it went together very nicely. Very little prep work required. Once assembled they were all primed black, and then again with white, giving them the classic "zenithal" lighting:
Since I paint with oils, the first thing after priming them is giving them all a good acrylic basecoat. When using acrylics to basecoat for oils, here are a few things I like to keep in mind:
These are fairly new-ish paints from Liquitex. Liquitex calls them "Acrylic Gouache", but essentially they're just very opaque and very matte acrylic paints... which is exactly what your want for your basecoats (at least if you plan to use oils). They are very, very good, and I like them a lot. (Golden has a similar line of paints called SoFlat Matte that look very promising as well).
Here is the figure (and other parts) completely basecoated and now ready for the actual painting to start:
The following mixes were used:
Nothing fancy, just plain cheap synthetic brushes (actually almost 99% of what I do uses cheap brushes).
So with this all finished, all the boring and tedious prep work is complete and we can now actually start painting In the next post we'll cover all the skin tones and areas of the figure.
As always, thank you for reading.
Regards,
Phil
PS - for the curious, here are some pics of where I've moved to...
Well after taking a somewhat non-deliberate hiatus from painting for well over two years now, I've finally been able to get back to painting. Essentially, at that time, I had some pretty momentous life changes take place (all for the much, much better), and one of them included leaving my home for well over 20 years in Philadelphia, PA for well... what I'd consider to be a much, much better place. The only downside to all this excitement has been not being able to paint. Now that things have settled and quieted down, I've finally been able to get back to it! (It also didn't help that it's almost impossible to get decent furniture where I'm at now, and the desk for my office/studio took well over a year and a half to finally arrive at the new house.)
Prior to taking my extended vacation, I painted a long series of ancient Greek subjects, and after unpacking and re-organizing the grey army, it turns out that I still have some of them left. This time, it's a series of Spartan hoplites from Big Child Creatives. They're normally known for more fantasy type figures, but I liked that their first foray into a more historical realm had some highly dynamically posed Spartans. Here they are:
While I will be painting all three together, for the purposes of this and subsequent posts, I'll just be focusing on the guy in the middle, the "Noble".
Here he is all prepped and ready for assembly:
As can be seen, everything is well cast and it went together very nicely. Very little prep work required. Once assembled they were all primed black, and then again with white, giving them the classic "zenithal" lighting:
Since I paint with oils, the first thing after priming them is giving them all a good acrylic basecoat. When using acrylics to basecoat for oils, here are a few things I like to keep in mind:
- I don't feel the need to be particularly neat when doing this stage. For me the point is to make sure I get the entire model and all of its details covered. As such, the basecoating exercise shouldn't be too time consuming - it should be fairly quick.
- You should make sure that you do enough coats/layers to get even, completely opaque coverage. None of the primer should be showing though, and nothing should look blotchy or inconsistent.
- From a color standpoint, I try to use the similar but darker colors for each of the different areas I'm going to paint. I never concern myself with an exact match or anything like that. As long as the basecoat color is a little darker than the oils, you're fine.
- For which ever are your preferred acrylics, it definitely pays to use ones that dry to a very matte finish - the more matte the better.
These are fairly new-ish paints from Liquitex. Liquitex calls them "Acrylic Gouache", but essentially they're just very opaque and very matte acrylic paints... which is exactly what your want for your basecoats (at least if you plan to use oils). They are very, very good, and I like them a lot. (Golden has a similar line of paints called SoFlat Matte that look very promising as well).
Here is the figure (and other parts) completely basecoated and now ready for the actual painting to start:
The following mixes were used:
- Skin tones: Lots of yellow ochre, a little bit of red oxide, and an even smaller amount of ultramarine blue, then titanium white was added to lighten the tone a little bit.
- All metal parts where a mix of yellow ochre, burnt umber, and dioxazine purple.
- All leather parts where just plain burnt umber
- All red fabrics where a mix of primary red, burnt umber, and dioxazine purple.
Nothing fancy, just plain cheap synthetic brushes (actually almost 99% of what I do uses cheap brushes).
So with this all finished, all the boring and tedious prep work is complete and we can now actually start painting In the next post we'll cover all the skin tones and areas of the figure.
As always, thank you for reading.
Regards,
Phil
PS - for the curious, here are some pics of where I've moved to...