[The Saxon Muster] A Little Dip'll Do You
Jul. 3rd, 2011 09:50 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Hey,
So the first unit of Saxons is finished. Twenty Saxon Thegns with spear and shield:
![[Saxon Muster] 20110603](https://farm6.static.flickr.com/5071/5899584104_f80a098777_z.jpg)
All the minis got "dipped", literally dipped into a pot of liquid that's very similar to wood stain. After getting a good coat, you shake the mini for a little bit and most of the stain flies off. What's left sticks to the nooks and crannies and the effect is heavy dark lines that make the rest of the color really pop. Then I painted the bases a forest green and went over all of it with a matte varnish (the dip leaves a shiny finish so this second coat dulls it down).
I'm amazed at how good my crappy paint job looks by dunking them in a stain. When I first heard about this technique it seemed the height of insanity, but I've used it on two projects now and it looks great.
A friend was over today and I showed them off. She gave me the highest compliment imaginable: "That's amazing, how do you paint all those little details?" That's pretty much my gob-smacked comment to all of my friends who can actually do good paint jobs so I'm rather chuffed by her appreciation.
Anyway, that's one unit down, another 2 to go before I've got the minimum to play and really another four to have a respectable force put together. I'm going to continue to update on my progress here, but I'll be hiding the pictures behind cuts and whatnot so if this has been a boring process, you can skip it.
later
Tom
So the first unit of Saxons is finished. Twenty Saxon Thegns with spear and shield:
![[Saxon Muster] 20110603](https://farm6.static.flickr.com/5071/5899584104_f80a098777_z.jpg)
All the minis got "dipped", literally dipped into a pot of liquid that's very similar to wood stain. After getting a good coat, you shake the mini for a little bit and most of the stain flies off. What's left sticks to the nooks and crannies and the effect is heavy dark lines that make the rest of the color really pop. Then I painted the bases a forest green and went over all of it with a matte varnish (the dip leaves a shiny finish so this second coat dulls it down).
I'm amazed at how good my crappy paint job looks by dunking them in a stain. When I first heard about this technique it seemed the height of insanity, but I've used it on two projects now and it looks great.
A friend was over today and I showed them off. She gave me the highest compliment imaginable: "That's amazing, how do you paint all those little details?" That's pretty much my gob-smacked comment to all of my friends who can actually do good paint jobs so I'm rather chuffed by her appreciation.
Anyway, that's one unit down, another 2 to go before I've got the minimum to play and really another four to have a respectable force put together. I'm going to continue to update on my progress here, but I'll be hiding the pictures behind cuts and whatnot so if this has been a boring process, you can skip it.
later
Tom
no subject
Date: 2011-07-04 07:45 am (UTC)If you keep posting photos, I'll keep clicking on them!
no subject
Date: 2011-07-04 09:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-07-06 03:34 am (UTC)Army Painter Quickshade -- Medium shade.
later
Tom