By Jay Wirth
With this article I will discuss the 3 step painting process so you can begin painting great looking miniatures. BEFORE YOU PAINTOnce you have found that perfect miniature and opened the package you will need to prep your figure. Using a rat tail file and craft knife clean up any flash and lines left from the molding process. Pay special attention to the areas between the arms and legs. Once your figure is cleaned up, base your figure if desired (if doing stands of figures you will skip this). At this stage many people mount the figure to a roofing nail to easier hold wile painting. At this time prime your miniature. I have found that white paint applied with a flat or shortened old brush works best. I have found that using a separate primer is not necessary. Using white paint works well; seeing the grey of the metal through the paint is the affect you want to get. Once the white prime' has dried use black ink to paint all metal parts weapons, armor, etc... aint all fur and hair black and black line areas such as were parts meet such as belts, sleeves, pouches, etc... PAINTINGWhen painting miniatures start with the flesh and finish the figure as if it was dressing. Pants, shirt, belts, coat. Leave the armor and hair for last. STEP 1: BASE COATThroughout the steps I will use painting flesh as my example. The steps are the same no matter what part you are painting. Apply the base coat. Keep the paint inside the area you are painting, dc not paint to the edges. This leaves a black line around the edges. If you do get the base color over an edge don't worry this will be fixed at step 3. STEP 2: INK WASHOnce your base coat is dry (flesh color) place on your pallet a drop of brown ink and dilute as desired. Generally, a mix of one part ink to three parts water looks best. Wash this mix over the flesh areas. Let the ink flow into the creases and flow into the black lined areas. At this point the base color is a different shade and the miniature is looking pretty rough. Don't despair! It's supposed to! STEP 3: HIGHLIGHTINGWhen the ink wash has dried you are ready to highlight. Using a flat or old larger brush pick a lighter shade of the base coat. Before applying color to the figure wipe the brush on a cloth or your finger, removing most of the color. Lightly brush over the raised surfaces and the high points will pick up the color. Painting metal is the same highlighting process. Start with the metal part painted black and highlight with your metallic color. Repeat the process for shiny metal or fewer times for darker tones. FINISHINGRepeat the three steps for the rest of the figure (bases and fine detail will be another article topic). When finished paint or spray your miniature with a protective coating. I have found that Krylon matte finish to be the best on the market. This clear spray finish can be found at a professional art supply store. I have pieces that I have been gaming with for ten years that still look just painted. CONCLUSIONUsing the three step process is an easy way to produce great looking miniatures. In the future I will discuss another popular painting style, the Layering Technique. Back to Renaissance Ink Issue 5 Table of Contents Back to Renaissance Ink List of Issues Back to MagWeb Master magazine List © Copyright 1995 by John Jay Wirth This article appears in MagWeb (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web. Other military history articles and gaming articles are available at http://www.magweb.com |