Logistics, The Figures Updated April 12th, 2013
Just gorgeous work Bob. Im blown away every time I see one of your builds.
Thanks Adam, I appreciate that!
Bob
Whether painting 300 figures for Warhammer or a large scale diorama, it's always impressive to see this assembly line style of painting. I've read of a few folk breaking painting in batches of 5 or so figures at a time, thus still ensuring quality while working in quantity. Do you follow a similar process, Bob?
Rudi
Hey Rudi,
Haven't heard from you in awhile!
I tend to paint them in types as opposed to a set number. For example; I'll do all my truck crews in a batch, then I'll paint all my 101st Airborne figures in a batch, the headquarters staff in another and so on. Sometimes it will be as few as three or as many as Fifty. When painting this number of figures, if I tried to maintain the quality of a Euromilitaire or the Chicago Figure Show entry on every figure, It would take a lifetime. Some single figure entries in those shows take a year or more to complete.
From doing this for so many years, I have learned how to cut corners while losing the least amount of quality possible. I have my composition thought out long in advance before I pose and convert, so when I paint, I know which figures will be in the foreground or will be involved in the most drama, which will be in the middle of a crowd and those which will be in the background, far from the viewer. My dioramas are so large, I use their very size to manipulate the quality. I know the areas where the viewer cannot get any closer than four feet. One thing, since I photograph these and they are published, those lessor quality figures can't be real dogs, otherwise they will be glaring, but I've learned many tricks to fool both the eye and the camera.
The result is that the viewer's eyes are drawn to the highest quality figures first giving the impression they are all the same. It is sort of cheating, but if you think about it, modeling is really all about cheating. Creating an illusion to fool the viewer. We don't recreate the real scene, we create in miniature what appears to be an actual scene of buildings, people and equipment, when in reality, it is only a heap of scraps of plastic, resin and epoxy.
Good to hear from you again.
Bob