This article is part of a larger series on how to paint Necrons. To return to that series, click here.
The Nihilakh dynasty are visually notable for combining teal and gold/bronze coloring on their armor. Most notably, Trazyn originally hails from this dynasty, and the studio paint job for Orikan the diviner also follows this color scheme. The Nihilakh Dynasty combine teal and gold with green energy and weapons to create one of the more striking schemes for Necrons.
I started by priming this model with
Leadbelcher spray.
Step 1. Basecoats
I kick things off by painting the gold parts and the gun. The gold parts get a coat of
Retributor Armor while the gun is painted with
Corvus Black, though I'll come back to that in a moment.
Step 2. Green Parts + Highlights
I do a small amount of highlighting here - I'll cover the black parts of the gun with a mix of
Incubi Darkness and Abaddon black - and I paint the coils, orbs, and cables with
Warpstone Glow.
Step 3. Washes + Striping
I wash the metal parts of the model with
Nuln Oil, wash the gold parts with
Agrax Earthshade, and he gun with
Drakenhof Nightshade. Then it's time to do the striping.
The stripes are done with
Sotek Green. There's one stripe down the middle of his forehead and one on each shoulderpad, tracing the countours of the pad. Keep the paint fairly wet for this and paint it in a sketchlike fashion; don't try and do the entire line in one brush stroke.
Step 4. Final Details
There's not a ton more here. I'll highligh the cables, orbs, and coils with
Moot Green, blending that up from Warpstone Glow, and use Moot Green to dot the eyes. The gun gets edge highlighted with Sotek Green, and I'll highlight some parts of the body with
Runefang Steel.
Bonus: Trazyn the Infinite
I painted Trazyn up here as an ally for my Astradus campaign, since he's the perfect kind of character to have ally or work with any faction to accomplish his own ends. I went with a quick studio default paint job on him, and he painted up pretty quick. If I were doing more Nihilakh characters, I'd likely follow his lead by doing more blue armor on their upper bodies.
Credit: Robert "TheChirurgeon" Jones
The metal body is
Leadbelcher washed with
Nuln Oil and then brushed with Leadbelcher and
Runefang Steel for edge highlights. The teal parts are painted with a base of
Incubi Darkness then covered with
Sotek Green and edge highlighted with a 50/50 mix of Sotek Green and
Reaper Pure White. I painted the gold bits with
Retributor Armour and then washed them with
Agrax Earthshade before edge highlighting them with
Ironbreaker. The green parts are based
Caliban Green, then I work up to
Moot Green and edge highlight with
Ogryn Camo.
This article is part of a larger series on how to paint Necrons. To return to that series, click here.
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