I am not a highly technical painter unlike some of my fellow goons – but I have developed a style of my own that I’ve kept for 15+ years. The overarching concept on all my models is a blended gradient from left to right. The idea is that when faced the same way, the army looks like the light is coming from one direction with both a bright and a dark side.
Credit: James "Boon" Kelling
In general, I try to keep the factions I paint tied together visually with some form of unifying color, even if it’s just an accent – in the case of my Ynnari it’s the use of red as a primary color for armor plating or on sashes/capes/etc. The Visarch, as is appropriate, sports his red armor. I wanted to give Yvraine more of a traditional Romani look, so I opted to retain the red on her few armored portions but instead go with cool blues and purples on her robes. I wasn’t sure if the colors would end up clashing, but I think it came out perfectly.
When I paint all of my colors usually get 3-4 different coats to blend from dark to light. In this case, I’ve gone with:
Armor (Red): Mephiston Red, Wildrider Red, Trollslayer Orange, and Fire Dragon Bright
Sash/Sword/Feathers (Purple): Naggaroth Night, Xereus Purple, Genestealer Purple, Emperor’s Children
Dress/Feathers: Sotek Green, Ahrimen Blue, Temple Guard Blue
Gold Jewelry/Accents: Balthazar Gold, Auric Armor Gold, Stormhost Silver
Gemstones: Abbadon Black, Caliban Green, Warpstone Glow, Moot Green, Ard Coat
Whites: Administratum Grey, White Scar
Black: Abbadon Black, Eshin Grey
Skin: XV-88, Ushabti Bone, Screaming Skull, Serphim Sepia
Gyrinx Familiar: XV-88, Ushabti Bone, Screaming Skull, White Scar, Fire Bright Orange, Moot Green, Flash Gitz Yellow, Abbadon Black
After laying out the base colors on the model I will go back and lay down rough base layers with a break where I want the blend to occur. Then I’ll begin the laborious, mind-numbing process of wet blending each color. After picking out details, highlighting, and finally touching up I will complete the gemstones. I’ll typically layer up then blend down, and finish by placing a white dot. Touch it up to fix any mistakes, varnish, ‘ard coat the gems and voila! I will likely go back later to add free-hand designs on her dress at some point, but for now she is done and ready for the next tournament!
Tip: if you’re not sure where a gradient will occur, you can shine a light to see where the light hits the model.
Caution: Do not follow in my footsteps –
paint and glue that kitty down AFTER Yvraine is done.