This year I decided to finally paint my Perry Mercenaries boxed sets that I purchased years ago. My inspiration came from the fact that I wanted something besides Chaos and Undead for my Oathmark games. However, I have not painted 28mm figures in years, so I am very rusty. Needless to say I also am very hard on myself and so far the results are not that impressive to me.
Disclaimer: I don't claim to be a great painter, not even good really. Sometimes I can produce something out of this world. Other times its crap.
I decided to go with Burgundians. That was probably a mistake. I hate painting white. Truly. That combined with hand drawn crosses and it is really a nightmare.
It has also been about 10 years since this boy assembled plastic model kits. My ignorance of this time period in history also did not help with assembly. In hindsight I would have mixed and matched arms and torsos differently.
The only washes used were on the armor. Everything else was shaded by hand, the Kevin Dallimore way. Like any art form, whether that is superior to using washes for shading is a matter of preference.
The crossbowmen are almost done, with 24 cavalry up next. The crossbowmen are tricky; I had to do some research to figure out what was on some of the models. Again, historical ignorance.
It has taken me three weeks to get this far and I am already beat. My mind is debating with itself: keep or sell. My skills have atrophied over the years by just painting 15mm sci fi. I have relied heavily on extreme highlighting and Tudor Polyshades in the past to finish off models at that scale. However I am struggling with these larger figures and using bright colors. My skills are just not up to snuff at the moment for this historical stuff I think. What I picture in my head and what I am able to produce are two very different things. In hindsight I should have gone for an easier scheme, such as red and blue.
I hate white.
Yes, but did we ever hear about how you feel about white?
ReplyDeleteSeriously though, they look decent. White is a hard colour to avoid the 'just spray primed it' effect. Austria napoleonic armies being a classic challenge. I usually ink a base colour (with sepia mostly) and then highlight with the original tone (close to a triad?), but with white I always do a really light highlight. Like pure white or offwhite over something more greyish. You might benefit some some deeper contrasts in the grooves/crevices.
But honestly, do you want to spend more time with these guys?
No, I dont. I finished the crossbowmen today and will call it quits I think. I have 24 cavalry to do but I think I will choose another scheme. I did some retinting with Vallejo Silver Grey. Looks a bit better.
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