Wednesday, June 20, 2012

My god... its full of Blanche...


Thanks so far for the Blanch-athon, and its turning up GOLD.  GOLD I tells Ye.  Keep them coming everyone, and I will do plenty of homage minis!

Here is some direct links to Steve Caseys Photos for you all to worship- I posted these first because many have not been seen before.  Some appear in Ratspike and WD, but at different angles.  Mr Casey, your mission is to photograph the rest!

I will now attempt to ID some of the parts and tell you where to get them!



Converted Asgard Dragon Lizard (Available from Viking Forge)

Aly Morrison Samurai Conversion

Citadel Dwarf Sorcerer

I am pretty sure the torso and legs are from Ral Partha Ogre with club (here)
 I
I See body a from a Ral Partha demon (here) and a face from a Ral Partha Jabberwock (Here)

Ral Partha Cyclops  (Buy here)
Space ranger (I have this guy) plus wolf- please ID the wolf and I will do this conversion!


Super smooth blending!  Awesome.
Run away!!!  Fantastic planet.
No idea.
Frikkin awesome alien!!!



Possibly some trolls in there?

Uh... tail looks familliar.... anyone?
Unknown

Unknown

Ral Partha Frost Giant

Ral Partha 13-002 Hill giant?  Foundry Elephant?

Rogue Trader Dreadnought

Citadel FF Balrog

Citadel George The Giant

Defies... uh... what was I saying?  What?

I uh... what was I saying... Oh look!  Boobs.  Uh....

Now fans of this diorama may like what I am cooking up here- I have hunted down most of the figures and am constructing warbands painted to match.  Yep.
Anyway, Thantsants wanted to know what the sorcerer blasting the door was... and no, he is not a citadel miniature.  He is actually a Ral Partha (now Iron Wind Metals) Wraith sculpted by Tom Meier.  You can still buy it here along with some mates...

Wraith (blasting door)
Samurai Liche (halfway across diorama)

Guys on hill- Citadel Chaos Warriors, not undead!
Bottom right, FA Antipaladin.  FT skeletons and mummies from FFfor the most part.
Now the guy on the hill is a tricky one.  He is actually a preslotta chaos warrior from citadel, as is his general lower down on the hill.  You will also find a Ral Partha rip off of that character (here), it has a weaker pose, less detail and different sleeves, but is close enough!



As promised, the links from other images...

Tears of Envy
Gothic Punk
Marienburg Gazette
Spyglassasylum

From world of Zhu- Converted LOTR Orc

Well more minis from me next week- in the meantime, keep yur blanchy links coming and I will post them up for everyone to oogle.

Ciao





Tuesday, June 19, 2012

John Blanche minis

God I just love his painterly mini style and twisted conversions! I have been collecting images lately and just cannot seem to find enough. I have ratspike, Heroes for wargames, blachitsu pdf on orc bikers, skaven imperial guard book, inquisitor and white dwarfs from the 1980s and have googled like mad to find more. What I really want is black library to do a Blanchitsu book just showing grids of picture after picture of JB works from 1980 through to today and do a video time lapse of him working!
Shall we start a petition?

Here are some I have gathered so far- apologies for not crediting the sources and linking back- I will correct that shortly when I have a moment to refind them but for now I am on my iphone and it does not let me store data with each... enjoy.






















I have lots more, but if anyone can point me to WD issues with his work, sites etc I would love it!


Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Monday, June 11, 2012

Lahmian medium

Ah hell no. A GW product thats worth the money?
Yep.
Lahmian medium is my new best friend. And I LOVE mediums. My additives tub is fit to bursting with six types of matt medium, varnished, glaze mediums etc. And I have been mixing my own special sauces for a while using windex, talc and other household items... But this is great right out of the bottle.
It allows layered glazing without gloss, and dulls shine like dullcoat. Exactly as it sez on da bottle. At six bucks australian, its still pretty pricey, but the convenience is worth the dollars I think.
I experimented using it to mix with windsor &newtown inks and they matt down like old citadel washes, leaving a pleasant tint.

I blasted through a night horror devils shading tonight thanks to the stuff and am surprised by just how much I like it.
As far as the new paint range here is my thoughts...
Dry: cute, Necron metal is extremely good- very fine metal grains make it brush on finer than most metallics.
If you want to save some cash, I found if I mixed a fat load of industrial talc into regular acrylics I got something similar in performance.

Bases: bluhg! Too glossy. Loved foundation paints with all my heart for their smooth opaque matt finish. Every one in the batch I had dried shiny. No good for base coating :(
However, I fixed mine by adding lots of industrial talc as a matting agent, a little dish soap to break surface tension and windex to thin and make it evaporate and dry on the model quickly but not on the brush.
Layers: medium thinned paints. Not bad for out of the bottle painters -I can see what they where thinking, but for more serious painters... Hmmm.
I am sticking with coat darms, p3 and vallejo model color, and thinning and adding medium myself.
Textured paint? Not very effective for the size and price. I ended up make my own using sandy paste, heavy structure gel, grits, talus, flock and ink. Much better and I get it bulk.

One last word on mediums. I recommend grabbing a bottle of Jo Sonjas magic mix. Its a matt finish medium with flow aid and retarder in juuuuust the right mix for blending types to go ga ga over.
Pics of that night horror next issue!


Monday, June 4, 2012

Trolling Lichemaster

Following the death of my Fantasy Tribes era Necromancer, a package arrive with these damned sexy minis!  Just in time to cheer me up after the death of the other necromancer, the trollolo guy. Cheers Luke!


Citadel's Mikael Jacsen & Heinrich Kemmler
Terror of the Lichemaster Deal Set

I wasn't planning on collecting the Lichemaster scenario figures, as scenario packs can get expensive real quick.  I decided I would only pump lolly, dosh and readies into a McDeath set.  Which, by the way is just 4 figures to go.  Naturally these are the expensive ones.  Oh well.  Economic crash may help there.
I am looking forward to painting these again- my last licks of paint on Heinrich where in 1990- where he got thickly painted green outfit.  This time I think I will go more with the 'week old corpse' description in the game book and a drabber outfit.  His exposed legs always sat wrong to me amongst the renaisance figures of that time.




My new 'paint one base color on everything in one go' discipline has paid its first dividends with my orc warband nearing completion. Having all the bases done for orc flesh, fur, leather and mail meant that a it did not take a lot of motivation to shade them in.  Its a bad photo, but I think I will do a proper studio pic once I finish them and add shields.  I am thinking of going a bit Paul Benson and a Frazer Gray on the shields.  Anyway, here is the progress...

WIP:  Orcs from ages past.  Mainly Perry Twins with some Kev Adams sculpts.





I am finding starting with a flat upper mid tone and shading first down, then up is a much faster technique to my normal shading up from dark.  Being confronted by a dark figure and knowing its going to take a while to build up to a basic look is a bit of a motivation crusher.  I am enjoying this way because after the initial dark shading washes (and by washes I mean tissue tapped glazes, sort of like an aimed wash), the model looks 'tabletop standard', and every pass I do adds a little more spice.  The other way only gives results near completion.

For my next load of figures I am also going for more color and contrast so they read better on the table, plus switching to lighter, more neutral earth tones rather than my normal mossy green for the base, as it makes the model pop out a little more, and I like using dark greens on my figures.

Trollolo guy died today. Trolling saruman was my favorite internet meme.  How about we Troll Lichemaster...

Lo lo lo, ha ha ha... trollo.. lol.. summon troll...


Thursday, May 31, 2012

Death of a necromancer

First up, a warning. Leadrot is highly toxic. Do not try this.
I did because I am an idiot.

Today is a sad day, for it marks the end of the life of a classic miniature.
Cast in the early eighties in nottingham, this figure spent its life waiting for a paint job that would never come. It flew to australia, where it met its fate near bondi beach.

This miniature, dear readers, is dead.


Sadly, I pronounced this necromancer dead today at 21:10. After years of adventuring (or sitting in a shoebox somewhere) he finally succumbed to the perils of leadrot.
He arrived from ebay a little tarnished, but just in need of a scrub.
Masked and in a very well ventilated space, I scrubbed him with a wire brush to lift the grime, only to notice that dreaded yellow-grey puff of dust.

Leadrot!

There was hope- some dental tools and a bit of digging back to bare metal might just save him, but after the most masterful cleaning I could muster and a deep removal of his base,I proceeded to chase the rot out by gouging out one side of his body. Completely shiney, i figured some putty and all would be fine.




I was happy that his fate had been averted, til I pulled out the pin vice from the hole I drilled to pin him to a base only to discover the bit full of toxic dust.

It was deep inside him. A microscopic vein of oxidization had crept inside his torso and spread.

He cannot be around my collection in case he infects them.

He has to be destroyed.

Since he never got his moment of glory, I thought I would blog him like some unknown soldier to the cause. Pay your respects to the never painted necromancer in the comments below.

Do not chase leadrot. If in doubt, bin it. Like the taint of chaos, you just cannot tell how deep it goes.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Dremel love

My wife bought me a stylus Dremmel today after she caught me pining over one in Bunnings hardware. Its been a ritual of mine- a pilgrimage to the display cabinet to pick up the samples and poke them at imaginary miniatures and, well, occasionally pretend its a laser gun. Pchoo pchoo!



Having inherited a perfectly good dremmel I could never justify the purchase. But oh, how wrong I was. I CAN justify it.
The stylus dremmel is absolutely brilliant.
First thing I noticed was no chord- that, combined with a light weight body instantly made it far, far easier to use. Clunky tools tend to sit on a desk as they are more bother to set up than its worth especially if you have to bugger about with cords. This baby has a docking station charger so its always charged and at arms reach, and I can keep my fave tips and spanner on it.
Within a few hours of receiving the gift I has used it to hollow out a toad miniature, make a zoat fit together, polish a c28 giant, sculpt the edge onto a resculpted c28 giants blade and make twisted rope wire for its handle.
I am totally gobsmacked how it has become my must have tool in one day!
Oh, and I made myself a new main double sided sculpting tool by grinding and polishing some brass rod and strip. Though brass is softer than steel, I wont have to sand back the rust to get a clean surface. I will give it a go and see if its better.
Back in mini land and it seems the imperial space marines and space farers from last month face a new foe....




Myfanwy the Cat vs. spacefarers. Whats her special attack move?




Yep, she sat on them. Kate took pictures of the carnage, lots of pictures. I guess she was too busy laughing to think about rescuing the minis.... Oh no, never mind the hours of painting I... Oh wait, she bought me an awesome Dremmel... Uh, carry on dear.




Deese wittle peeepol got no noms. Me punish dem fur deir insolence.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Flesh and Windex

My buy/paint ratio is looking bad at the moment, and I realized some drastic action needed to be taken. Yes, dear reader, I needed to take a bite out of the lead pile to show it who is boss!
Recently I found myself with a hour to kill and scoured my shelves for something I could knock out quickly, and after a couple of laps I realized the flaw in my thinking. I was categorizing figures into a 'want to do justice' pile. In other words, things I will do later when I have time to make them really good. Aka, wont happen because I am too busy.
What to do?
I have been kicking around that thought for a week or so like a baby in a sick joke, when I came to the conclusion that...

a: I would rather my collection painted to some basic standard rather than bare metal.
B: as I game with them, a brighter, more contrasted paint job would help my models 'read' better on the tabletop.
C: my current layering up from darks to lights using thin layers takes ages and has too many steps to completion. This puts me off tackling figures.
D: Carob is no substitute for chocolate.

In order to get revving I would have to adjust my paint style to a more traditional method of hitting the mid tone, then shading both down to shadow and up to highlight. Rather than murky glazed layers, a crisp, clean, even foundation base for each color would be a great start.

I formed the strategy that if I took a base color, say flesh or leather brown, then applied it to every single mini in a sitting, in a few weeks I would have the majority of my figures flat colored.

The fun bit for me has always been shading, and having a load of base coated figures ready to roll would mean I could just grab a few and start finessing.

I kicked this strategy off at lunch today by 'retiring the skin job'. 54 figures got their skin knocked out using a mix of tallarn flesh, bugmans glow, windex and flow aid. Thats right, windex.
You know, that blue stuff people other than yourself clean windows wiv.
Windex contains alcohol and ammonia, so promptly evaporates leaving pigment behind. Airbrush artists have been using it to thin acrylics for donkeys years, and no, the blue color does not effect the paint color.
So using it instead of water to thin foundation/ base acrylic means a fast evaporating thin matt layer is left.
Flow aid helps break the surface tension, allowing everything to mix and flow off the brush.
Load your brush, then wick off excess moisture onto a tissue before brushing. 3 quick coats was enough for a flat and thanks to mr windex, by the time you have done the front of a leg, the back is dry enough for the next coat. Thin, even, unclogged and hella fast.
The result? 54 figures skin in a lunchbreak. Admittedly lots of these where just face and hands, but the technique is proven and I look forward to the next few sessions. I think reds next. :)
Finally reading airbrush blogs and magazines paid off!
The downside is nothing to show for a while, but after that period is up you should see an explosion of productivity from me!

Good luck with your own windex experiments. Just dont lick your brushes.
Post your Baby kicking windex jokes below.





Sunday, May 20, 2012

Sniped!

I woke up this morning in a sunny mood, wondering which wonders I won on Ebay.
Nuthin'.
I got slaughtered! Sniped, steam rolled or shilled out into the cold.
Now I could find this depressing, maybe call the wwaaaaambulance but no! No, I take this as a jolly good sign that the euro economy is looking up. Think about it- I am bidding true blue, Vegemite stained, Australian dollars against pounds, dollars, euro and greek i.o.u.s and there are more people who can afford cabbage and still splash out on miscellaneous odds and ends from the early era of citadel minis.
I wonder how those poor wall street traders are holding up? Poor chaps. Makes your heart...
Heres a some miniatures...


Kevin Adams zombies (with help from a base of blue moon zombies) attack citadel militia in a Skulldred showdown. (Preslotta citadel wizard reading his financial times scroll in the backdrop). Unfortunately these chaps get no reinforcements this week.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Spawn ate my post

Phoomph! Or foomp! Or blib!
Gone! My post vanished like Bill the Pony midway through a Rings book (fair call to JRRT- I always forget pack animals and hireling npcs too). Only my post did not suddenly come back after I lost Gandalf. Er... I could try loosing my Gandalf from my 1980's fellowship boxed set but I doubt that posts coming back.
My suspicions turn to the iphone app I have been posting with lately. I am staring at it all squinty eyed like a circus freak in a Tom Waits tale. Hey thats two pop culture references, two similes and only one miniature reference.
On a side note, My favorite quote is...
"Similes. They are like metaphors."

Aaaaaaaaaaanyway, as I cannot remember the content I have a squinty eyed carnies suspicion that it wasnt very interesting and probably deserved its death. I think it did feature this picture though...


This is one of the two early chaos spawn, both of which had boobies. The first spawn ever? Maybe, but I would give a suspicious Waitsian carney squint at the three legged crab mutant from Asgard as a possible first. Answers on a postcard to....
This was the first figure I found that used the 'spawn' moniker (I used a Moniker once- she kept calling me for weeks after).
It is reasonably rare on ebay, but it is rare to find one with its eyestalks intact. This one was broken but cheap, so I decided to adopt it and macguyver it back into shape. Similies... Like metaphors... Get it?
It has been that sort of a hobby month- I restored the first chaos demon,( a kind of insect woman with boobies and claws), by carefully hollowing out the shattered legs, segment by segment and running fine stiff wire through. Worth the effort, as it is technically complete and very rare indeed.

My latest binge on spacefarers arrived this week, getting me closer to my mega retro laserburn project. I was surprised, after my post talking about how rare the loose parts where to win a full set of weapons with an uncontested bid!
Having shaved 20 dollars off the average price of Ral Partha Catleoblepas and rendered worthless the spacefarers bitz, I really should do the collectors community a favor and do an article on how rare the McDeath family is. You know, to get them below 300 bucks. No, before anyone asks I am not bidding on that Sandra Prangle thats up at the moment.
:)




Tuesday, April 24, 2012

They came from SPACE... ACE... ace... ace

Something special

Something special for you this edition, as Kingsminis takes you back to the very beginnings of Warhammer 40k, pops some lasers in a toaster oven and forgets about them.

LASERBURN!!!!


Yes, back before the dawn of Rogue Trader, Bryan Ansel wrote Laserburn.  It introduced us to a few Games Workshop regulars... Power Gloves, Force Blades, Flamers, Dreadnought Armour, Bolt Pistols, Needlers, Conversion beams (sadly lost after Rogue Trader), The Empire and The Inquisition and Lord Knights, who each have a detchment of Imperial Marines.  Familliar huh?
Laserburn has more in common with Games Workshop's Inquisitor game than 40k itself.  The game is based on the concept of campaign stories, often using a games master to control the play.  The system is percentile, has hit locations and enough tables to keep Gary Gygax amused for a short while.
Citadel released a small range of figures to go with the game called The Spacefarers.  I have been collecting these for a while now, and since I had enough to play Laserburn with, I decided to track down a copy on ebay.

Complete with coffee stains.  I hope thats coffee.


Laserburn introduced The Red Redemption, who would later surface in Warhammer as The Red Redemption cult of Khorne and later as The Redemptionists in Necromunda.
What you may not know is that The Red Redemption where created by french fantasy master Druillet, appearing in his Lone Sloan comic in the 1970s.  A play on the word Redemption meaning both to pay up, and to be saved.  Hence an order of monks who stalk a future las vegas world who firebomb anyone who does not pay their tithe.  Brilliant stuff, considering how The Church made its living during the dark ages.  Interestingly enough, the costume Loan Slone wears as he kicks their ass looks to have been the inspiration for Han Solos getup.  Sci fi was a smaller world back then.

Pchoo, Pchoo!  Dark Disciples get ready to Redeem stuff.
The Laserburn Imperium was run by the High Lords of the Imperium and there was a miniature of the Emperor- a cheerful chap in a visor and robes.  The concept of the immortal emperor which appeared in Warhammer 40k: Rogue Trader game seems to have been modelled after Emperor Huon from Michael Moorcock's Hawkmoon novel The Jewel in the Skull,who has an all powerful, ancient being trapped in his throne chamber by the machine that kept him alive, little more than a twisted embryo fed by tubes. Hmmm.

The Laserburn book does have a rather non PC attitude, but remember this is the seventies and the world was a different place.  Boobs of the future tend to pop out a bit, and The Dark Worlds are populated maintly by 'African' and 'near eastern' races who follow The Red Redemption in the worship of Allah, 'Lord of The Firey Hells' instead of The Emperor under the prophet Zandrig.  Can you imagine anyone publishing that these days?
These days, everyone takes the Star Trek route of using aliens as metaphors to replace Earth cultures in PC times.  Its probably would not surprise you if I point out that the Imperium is clearly The Catholic Church, Chaos is their Protestant enemy (Burn the heretics and witches), Eldar/Tau step in for what was once called 'The Yellow Peril' (following in Mekons footsteps.... or, uh, hover tracks) and Orcs are clearly 'ignorant tribal savages' painted green (or football hooligans, I get confused).  Its funny that miniatures wargaming, which is usually about reinacting bloody race, country and religious wars evolved into fantasy gaming which is actually much more PC as it disguises its sources.  Ironically, its fantasy gaming that cops the unPC flack... remember the publicity 'Dungeons and Dragons' copped in the 1980s?
 Aaaaaaanyway, pushing unPCness of the universe aside, the Spacefarer figures are all pretty charmingly old school.  Scanners are strapped to arms, tape drive backpacks and flight suits mingled with slashed puffed sleeves (blake 7 anyone) and space scooters- you get a real taste of what science fiction was back then.  Yes... budget BBC.

I chose to paint my dark disciples white, as I imagine them played by the sort of extras and stuntmen the BBC would use for Blake7 and Doctor Who.  I painted their weird helmet to look like judges wigs, as it gave them a bit more of a Pink Flloyd touch.  The red redemptionist fanatic got a yellow chequer to give a John Blanchy touch, and I went with the classic Druillet look.


S44 Giant Android Law Enforcer.
Bzzt...Go ahead punk.  Clickm... Make my millenium.
 I decided to do all my spacefarers in NMM, as metallic flakes look too big on such small figures.  I decided to base them all on flat acrylic 25mm lasercut bases as they where cut by frikkin lasers, and had a coin like feel, without the metal wear and tear.

Hey, are you Johnny Alpha?  Citadel Spacefarers
S5 Bounty Hunter, S22 Merchant, S36 Marine firing Autolaser
 I painted my interplanetary merchant purple to give him a pre-rubber forehead science fiction alien feel.  His forehead was either damaged, or there is something on it that I cannot make out.  I painted a third eye symbol on it to cover it up.  The imperial marines got the kill team charlie scheme.

S21 Interplanetart Scout + Bolt gun
S8 adventurer with machine pistol and power glove
The interplanetary scout is one of the few Citadel models blessed with a moustache, which died out during the 1980s.  Elves also had moustaches before Jes Goodwin pushed them to be more like American Indians with mohawks, war dancers and beardless faces.  With the MO in place, I wanted to call him 'Dirty' Sanchez Addams... so I ended up downplaying the detail by painting the mo light grey and blending it into a 5oclock shadow.  All equipment I left beige, and worked as much orange is as I could stomach. 


A band of adventurors sneak up on a marine.

Collecting Space Farers

Before you rush off an drop some hard earned on a set of these, you have to be aware of a few things.  Firstly, these I categorise as skilled collectors miniatures.  The figures are extremely rough and require a lot of fine filling and sanding to make them paintable by modern standards, and this is made worse by their age- and often are quite deteriorated.  Noses are almost always flat, weapon shafts are thin and break off easily, and much of the detail needs to be fixed up a bit as the miniatures seem to have been made in quite a hurry.  Often flash is pretty much all the detail you get and you have to carve out whole areas of face and rebuild with putty.  The bikes, in particular, require a great deal of remodelling, unless you plan to just paint them dark metal colors.

The second reason I class these as collectors figures, is that they are tiny by modern comparison, being true 25mm scale figures.  Sadly the only thing that scales up against space farers are space farers and Citadel Startrek figures... check out the following pic.

Marines across the decades.
Modern Citadel, pre 40k C100 marine and earlier Spacefarer marine



There are 53 spacefarer codes with 2 additional figures from the Star Trek range that appear in the Space Farer range in a trade catalogue, so it will keep you hunting for a while, especially the vehicles, which have seven or eight peices, some of which are fragile and easily lost.  You will have to bid hard to get those.  Codes 47 and 48 contain loose guns and jetpacks, which are pretty much impossible to find.

Fixing a needler

Farers guns often need replacing, especially needle rifles.  No point trying to patch them-  snip off the whole shaft and replace.  To do this, drill a deep hole into the gun.  To make the barrel use a stiff, but flexible wire, such as paperclip wire that you have sanded a little to make rough.  Pinch the end with pliers to give something for the milliput to cling to, and place a small ball of milliput that has had fifteen minutes to dry on it.  Once set, sand the new tip down to your liking.  Snip the new shaft to length and fix with superglue to the model.  You can also find brass tubing that will fit snugly over your wire to make a nozzle if your prefer.  This is also easy to sand into shape, and you automatically get a hole for the blast to come out.  If you use a pin or needle, you stand a chance of hurting yourself if you drop the figure.  Clipped pins snap easily and ping off with great force- certainly enough to catch one in the eye.  Better to have a slightly bendy barrel than that.


Well thats it from me... I hope you enjoyed this trip back into the future.


Sunday, April 22, 2012

Restraint rant

I am not collecting space orks.I am not collecting space orks.I am not collecting space orks.I am not collecting space orks.I am not collecting space orks.I am not collecting space orks.

Sigh... it seems my lead addiction is worsening, as I have started eyeballing figures from ranges I am not yet collecting. Thats bad. Thats very, very bad. One space Ork and booph! Next thing you know I have a shelf load of the buggers. And I am not collecting space Orks!
Its bad enough that right now I am on a Realm of Chaos era binge, Greater demons... Sorry Daemons... are not cheap,and like pringles you cant stop at just one right?
I dont like space orks. Do I? But then again I didnt like Ral Partha figures and look what happened!
Heck, am I going to wake up one day and start wanting Marauder minis? I want it on record that I hate the look of marauder figures, no sense of weight, strange faces and clinically smooth without any surprising little details to hold the eye. Mind you, it did not help that they arrived at the moment everything in white dwarf went to garish clashing colors- sickening orange and green, blue and red - complimentary colors at full saturation fighting for attention on stiff looking figures.... Good god the 1990s where an eyesore.
Add to that horrific changes like Gary Morleys undead who where all posed like Terrance and Phillip replacing Kev Adams characterful zombies, and Kev himself stopped making characterful goblinoids with rich and varied faces and started churning out cookie cutter night goblins and orcs with the same symmetrical, tiny toothed faces, fluffy 3 spiked helmets, painted that frikkin cranked up orange-red and full bore green... Uhg, I was OUT of there and over to Warzone before the dust settled on the first box of primary colored single pose empire troops. Bad citadel- go to your room!
Anyway, I digress. I dont collect first release space Orks- even though they represent the last great Adams goblinoid phase... Uhg... Maybe just one then... Now should it be Evilgrin ironbonce or smiler rogit?
Hmmm.

Next prog... Something painted from Space... space.... pace... ace....





Tuesday, April 3, 2012

New citadel paints

Ahh the paints are dead, long live the paints.

Yes, so the big, big buzz at the moment is the new citadel paints.
Well, I am actually quite happy by the addition of more shades of washes and foundations, but the renaming of old lines bugs me a bit.  I won't be rushing out to replace my paints any time soon, but if I happen to pass a GW in a few months will definately grab some choice picks to explore.

What confuses me is that John Blanche uses a 50-50 mix of Gryphonne Sepia and Devlan Mud on all his figures- which is something I do as the former is too garish, the latter too dull.  It would have been nice to see these adjusted or perhaps an intermediate one added.  Never mind, Windsor and Newton Nut brown plus matte medium and flow aid is pretty close.

I am really loving my Taucept Ocre (or whatever its called now)- as an undercoat for yellow.  Finally, yes finally I painted something yellow that looked good.  I think your gonna like this!

Monday, April 2, 2012

Bitz box bashing and the dawn of the great rebasing

Whilst I sculpt miniatures I like to have a couple of conversions on the go to use up scrap putty or pass time whilst waiting for the right set on the putty to allow fine detailing.
Right now I am wrapping up the fiddly fine details on ten Lead Adventure mutants, so had time to try cobbling together some figures using a few sprues of laser weapons from the ever awesome Hasslefree Miniatures. Victoria Lamb recommended them to me and I can see why. Dead handy.



The parts come from what I believe where marauder figures, the previous owner had converted them into super hero figures. I got them in a lot just to grab a rare imperial assassin figure, and always figured I would find something to use them on. Now they are perfect as perps for Judge Dredd, Rogue Trader or future wars!
The girl on the right's face is from a quite uncheerful Jez Goodwin elf cheerleader. Two broken ones lurk in my bitz box, so she may reappear in another build!
Having those hasslefree guns means any miniature can be repurposed into a John Blanchesque dystopian future figure in no time. Two thumbs up from me Kev and Sal!

My hobby time this week was eaten up by the arrival of one big assed bag of 30mm lipped bases.

Armed with my trusty tin snips, sand and about a pint of superglue, I started the strangely satisfying task of hacking off and remounting the majority of figures on my shelves.

Here be one batch awaiting sand.


As discussed in a recent post its amazing the difference these bases make to the presence of each figure, and I have a new rush of painty juju flowing up the inspirational pipe, encouraging me to get stuck into finishing up a few new warbands from many I rebased, ready for some hardcore Skulldred skirmish sessions!
Rebase a figure you are sick of looking at and voila! Painty juju.


I decided to kick off the basing exploits with some undead and chaos thug figures that have been hanging around the lead pile for too long gathering mental cloggyness. Using a production line mentality, I based, primed, undercoated, ambient blue overbrushed and sea grey / white drybrushed pre shaded the whole damn lot on two wooden batons.
I found it really surprising just how empowering transitioning lead pile long timers to 'ready to paint'. It means any time I like I can just pick up a figure and go for it.
I can't wait to slap some lime green on that tentacle thug. Classic!