Today I venture into the chamber of darkness to explore painting in grey scale. However, since this is supposed to be an actual challenge, and since I have already done hordes of zombies in greyscale in past challenges, I thought I should challenge myself in some other way... yeah, I know, I am a glutton for punishment. So, in addition to doing this figure in grey scale, I also did it with oil paints for the first time ever!
I know, I know, oil paints on a 28mm miniature? Madness you say, and you are not far off. To be fair...
Sorry, I couldn't resist... I love Letterkenny :-)
Anyway, to be fair, I have used oil paints in the past but only as super thinned down pin washes for vehicles, so using only oil paints on a figure is now to me (and maybe a new normal? more on that later). So, here is all I used when painting this figure....
After that it was simply
putting dots of black or white where I wanted shadow or highlight and
using a clean brush to blend it with the grey already in place. It was
an amazing experience, as it was so much easier to get smooth blends
compared to acrylics where you need to wet blend with incredible speed
to avoid drying or super thin layers.
I
even painted the clump of static grass with thinned oil paint as I only
had coloured tufts. You can not imagine how hard it is to paint static
grass until you try it.... OMG, not my best idea, but at least it
turned out ok.
I always take this challenge as an opportunity to try something new each year, either a new era, a new scale, a new painting technique or tool, just something new. After all experimentation leads to learning and growth (even if the experiment fails you learn something, sometimes you even learn more!). This year the plan was a new era (coming soon) and playing with oils, and I have to say that so far, I loved the process of painting with oils so much that I will be trying a few more full colour oil painted figures over the course of the challenge, so watch for more to come.
I am assuming that working with colours is going to complicate the process vastly compared to just black and white, but it's a new chance to learn. Also due to the drying times involved, it is not something I would consider for everything, but for characters or special models or even just for effects, I think I may just have a new tool in the toolbox!
Oh, and this is a 28mm French Great War infantry model, I
am sorry I do not remember the company though. It might be a Renegade
figure as it is pretty chunky.
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