Monroe Perdu
Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2004
- Messages
- 12
Thanks for all the kind words you guys! Yes, it's Japanese armor king for the figure. I ordered quite a few of his WWI figures this past year and he was a good guy to deal with. He does resin 35th scale figures as already mentioned. I used clear shoe polish on the helmets and it sems to give a nice scale shine to them.
The building is weathered by kind of staining it with the ceramic paints and getting a kind of patina collecting in the texture. I like painting the old buildings because it's easy to just wash on colors until it looks right to me. The signage is created by printing the text backwards from the computer, placing it face down on the wall and washing it with alcohol to transfer it to the wall. This works best with black and then any colors can be hand painted. Sometimes the image is kind of "ghosted" onto the wall and sometimes, you have to come back with additional washes or even sand it with very fine sandpaper to get it to look aged. It takes some experimenting.
I did a little article awhile ago on another website that shows another example but I don't know the ettiquette regarding mentioning other sites.
The cel paint is water based acrylic and I can get it in art stores here in the Los Angeles area. I have also ordered it directly from the manufacturer and I like it because they are very opaque and easily paint light colors over dark, so I can go back and forth when blending and shading.
Mike
The building is weathered by kind of staining it with the ceramic paints and getting a kind of patina collecting in the texture. I like painting the old buildings because it's easy to just wash on colors until it looks right to me. The signage is created by printing the text backwards from the computer, placing it face down on the wall and washing it with alcohol to transfer it to the wall. This works best with black and then any colors can be hand painted. Sometimes the image is kind of "ghosted" onto the wall and sometimes, you have to come back with additional washes or even sand it with very fine sandpaper to get it to look aged. It takes some experimenting.
I did a little article awhile ago on another website that shows another example but I don't know the ettiquette regarding mentioning other sites.
The cel paint is water based acrylic and I can get it in art stores here in the Los Angeles area. I have also ordered it directly from the manufacturer and I like it because they are very opaque and easily paint light colors over dark, so I can go back and forth when blending and shading.
Mike