They look great.Very good advice. I’m nearly finished with the second set of ten and I think I’ll take a break to work on my engine today.
However, I am very happy with how they turned out. Still have the frills to do but I’m not sure what to do with them. Two of my first batch:
View attachment 45450
Very good advice. I’m nearly finished with the second set of ten and I think I’ll take a break to work on my engine today.
However, I am very happy with how they turned out. Still have the frills to do but I’m not sure what to do with them. Two of my first batch:
View attachment 45450

@Joshua Horchler this is really good advice I tried it out on the stegadon torso I’m working on, I do have a few questions though. The colors feel extremely muted, is it just a matter of doing another dry brush round or do I need to go up in the brightness of the pigment.
Also, how do you go about blending an underbelly color a bit better
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It can be very useful and faster than layering. It won't work on flat models, but when you have big Stegadon muscles it works great. The hardest part is learning how to position your brush and model and controlling the amount of paint and wetness on the brush. I would suggest starting with very little paint on the brush and then adding more if it is too light.I also occasionally use that technique for layering. I am not good with it yet but it can work pretty well.
@Joshua Horchler @Aginor thanks for the discussion guys I learned a lot actually. I’m going to finish him off tonight and I’ll post how the experiment went!
Yeah if you paint a lot of the small details then the Stegadon is a major time sink. I think I spent several weeks working on mine for three hours almost each day.View attachment 45869
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Making some really good progress. Still so much to do and honestly this thing is a lot more work than I anticipated