Hello there guys, ghouls, and, thampires. Today I'm gonna walk through my method for speed painting tentacles. Its relatively simple and nothing crazy but the results will make any cultist of Nurgle green with envy (or gangrene, not really sure). So lets go ahead and get started!
Say hello to our subject today, Jeffery.
Jeffery is a model for a few paint tutorials so ignore how the rest develops
Step 1: Undercoat Zenithal White
We start off with getting a zenithal prime on the model. For those who don't know, this is a technique where you start the model as primed black, then prime with white from above. I do this with just Chaos Black spray and then spray from above with White Scar spray, but you can do this with any brand or even by priming black and dry brushing white. Doing this will push our translucent paints highlighting abilities even further and give the initial coat even more punch.
You'll notice I went and painted all the skin before touching the tentacles. This wasn't by accident. Tentacles are often an accent that you want to pop and stand out drastically from the rest of your scheme, as such getting an idea of what the other colors that will be present on the model gives you an idea of what will pop next to it. In this situation, since I'm painting with yellowish bone armor and reddish hues in the skin, I wanted something closer to purple and blue. Green would probably have worked here too, but I wanted to accent the skin with that color later.
Jeffery is a bit farther along in this photo. and you can see how the tentacle contrasts directly with the rest of him
Step 2: Base Coat of Blue/Purple
First I applied a blue and purple mix of deep toned translucent paints to the tentacle. Specifically I used Army Painter's
Beowulf Blue and
Swarm Purple Speedpaints mixed at about 50:50. This was a bit brighter than I would like so I continued glazing, that said that could be a perfectly acceptable tentacle in the right context so feel free to stop there.
Jeffery is just about ready to go hit the town
Step 3: Glaze of Burgundy
Next step is glaze on some Burgundy too push the color closer to purple. Now you may be asking "Why didn't you just pick a purple you liked and use that?" and my answer is layering in different colored contrasts and glazes makes your tentacle look all the weirder. Tentacles are an organic thing, and most organic things aren't just one color! so this provides some depth.
Anyway, for this step I glazed in some thinned down
Murder Scene from Army Painter's Speedpaint range in a 50:50 mix of that and
Speedpaint Medium, but this works just as well with something like
Volupus Pink from Citadel. I also use this color on the skin tone I have to make the area the tentacle is emerging from look more like muscle.
Damn Jeffery, looking good!
Step 3: Highlight
The last step is to hit the tentacle with a highlight. This can be a bit tricky for a few reasons. First is tentacles are often cylindrical and twist around so it can be hard to decide where to highlight. Second is if you're keeping your tentacle multi colored for the reasons stated above, then deciding on a highlight color might be hard.
For the first problem, think about the angles the tentacle will be viewed from and work to highlight the raised parts of those angles. For the second, just go back to your initial thought of what color you wanted the tentacle to be, I wanted a purple tentacle so I highlighted purple. Specifically I used some of Citadel's
Genestealer Purple.
And that's it!
To recap:
- Start with a zenithal of white and black
- Base with a 50:50 mix of Beowulf Blue and Swarm Purple
- Glaze with a 50:50 mix of Murder Scene and Speedpaint Medium
- Highlight with Genestealer Purple