RichB
Well-known member
Richard de Vere (15 Aug 1385 - 15 Feb 1417) was involved in three forays to France, the most notable being Henry V's invasion in 1415 and was a commander at Agincourt on 25 Oct 1415.
Broke Verlinden's 200mm bust out of the stash back in January.
Only 4 parts to assemble.
In the time since then I have been playing with ways to paint armour. My first try came out looking to old and worn for an Earl and had a bit of green tint from using too much Burnt Umber. So I stripped it down, re-primed him and he sat on the bench glowering at me until tonight.
First step is apply a base metallic, in this case I used Vallejo Oily Steel.
After letting it dry for about 20-30 minutes I applied a scrub coat of Payne's Grey with a touch of Burnt Umber and Burnt Sienna.
I then thinned it back using a clean, dry make-up brush letting some of the paint remain in the joints and around raised details. Applying a bit of pressure polishes the surface and gives it a nice sheen.
I will let the oils set up before moving on to the next steps.
A word of advice, do not attempt to "liberate" make-up brushes from the sacred temple we mere mortals know as a bathroom. The High Priestess that rules that domain jealously guards these scared instruments and can rain down great wrath upon outsiders who covet them.
Cheers,
Rich
Broke Verlinden's 200mm bust out of the stash back in January.

Only 4 parts to assemble.

In the time since then I have been playing with ways to paint armour. My first try came out looking to old and worn for an Earl and had a bit of green tint from using too much Burnt Umber. So I stripped it down, re-primed him and he sat on the bench glowering at me until tonight.
First step is apply a base metallic, in this case I used Vallejo Oily Steel.


After letting it dry for about 20-30 minutes I applied a scrub coat of Payne's Grey with a touch of Burnt Umber and Burnt Sienna.


I then thinned it back using a clean, dry make-up brush letting some of the paint remain in the joints and around raised details. Applying a bit of pressure polishes the surface and gives it a nice sheen.


I will let the oils set up before moving on to the next steps.
A word of advice, do not attempt to "liberate" make-up brushes from the sacred temple we mere mortals know as a bathroom. The High Priestess that rules that domain jealously guards these scared instruments and can rain down great wrath upon outsiders who covet them.
Cheers,
Rich