|
Painting is often a very individual style so your style may vary
but this is how I work..
(Fig.1). The instructions that came with the 80-series figure plus
the box label for references.
Attach the figure to a board so you are not handling the figure
while painting. This avoids fingerprints and smudging.
The paints I use are Vallejo acrylics so I need to add some water
to them for different densities of paint.
Always mix enough paint colour to cover the intended area of the
figure or risk having different shades of that colour appear when
you ran out and had to make some more.
Mix the water evenly so the paint is not lumpy and can be painted
smoothly.
Fig.2: We start with a base coat of brown for the trousers, lightly
painting the area so the paint is evenly coating the figure. Allow
for a slight overlap onto other unpainted areas as you will
be painting those later and can correct that overlap. The overlap
helps prevent leaving black spots between 2 colours. Always work
from the inner undergarments (shirt) out to the overgarments
(coat). Dry between each coat - use a fan or heater to assist this
process.
Work from the larger areas (trousers) first then work
on the smaller areas (shoes).
Fig.3: Add a light wash of black to the trousers, this fills
in the creases and increases details and overall definition. (Washs
should be about 5 to 1 water to paint ratio - a kind of translucent
level)
Dry the brush a little and lightly brush the trousers to remove
paint excess from the rest of the raised areas. Stroke brush on
a cloth or tissue lightly to remove the excess water and paint as
you go.
Fig.4 and 5: Add white layer to waistcoat and chest belts (
will need 2 to 3 coats before complete) and use smaller brushes
for fine detail and larger brushes for larger areas of coverage.
Dry paint before proceeding otherwise paint may mix with previous
layer.
Add blue (navy) to coat and define the waistcoat and belts
with a fine brush. Dry paint.
Fig.6: Dry Brush firmly both the coat and trousers to increase
details and realism. Use tissue to remove excess water and paint
from brush as you go to prevent smearing. The brush thins the paint
on the figures highlights (e.g.: knees and elbows) and this makes
the colour less uniform and more realistic.
|