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Ranked, filed and ready! |
Continuing on from the previous post I proceeded to make progress on these guys.
I never liked the way GW used to paint the old hobgoblins. They were green, oh so green. Greener than the regular grots and gobos by far. I always thought of hobgoblins to be a bit more on the tan side with a hint of green. A hobgrot painting tutorial in a recent White Dwarf really brought the idea home for me. I have always thought the ideal hobgoblins were the ones depicted on the cover of Warlock magazine #4 (which I bought at the Stars & Stripes bookstore at RAF Greenham Common way back in 1985). Their look forever informed my interpretation of what Hobgoblins should look like. Sadly I don't think any company has ever produced a miniature depicting a pair of them riding a bad-ass griffin but 12 year-old me is holding out hope!
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Warlock Magazine #4. Such an awesome magazine this was. |
Anyway, I began by simply basecoating the skin using Hobgrot Flesh.
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Hobgrot Flesh. |
Next I washed the skin using
Reikland Fleshwash. |
Reikland Fleshwash. |
I painted all the ropes (of which there seems to be alot) that adorn these fellas and their shields using
Kborne Red. Their flesh received another layer of
Hobgrot Flesh. Then disaster struck:
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Calamity. |
We have two new kittens we adopted about two weeks ago who tend to combine together into the avatar of a tornado. I made the mistake of leaving the door to my room open and they ended up messing with my table displacing many of my WIP models and worse knocking the movement tray of Hobgrots onto my floor. About half of them were busted off of their bases, but none of the actual miniatures were broken. Sadly the Lance ro my Pegaduke* was snapped off but I managed to fix it .
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Don't let the cuteness of this daemon trick you. |
Once the repairs were made, I highlighted their flesh using Zandari Dust. Then I applied
Leadbelcher to their metal things (armor, weapons, trinkets, and whatever else) and painted their teeth with
Wraithbone. Oh, and I picked out their eyes using
Khorne Red.
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Repaired. |
The metals were washed with
Cryptek Armourshade Gloss. I can't recommend this color enough for aging metals, it's amazing!
The ropes that these guys are basically wearing as crude clothing were painted with Khorne Red. Although I like how these colors looked, at a glance from a distance they kind of looked like guts dangling out of everyone's bellies. That wasn't a look I wanted to run with.
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Repaired and with more paint. |
So I went old skool and broke out the classic
Blood Red from the '90s and painted over the
Khorne Red with it. I really dig this now! This really worked out well on their shields also.
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Red shields (with battle damage). |
I decided that he liquid dripping off of the Champion's sword was blood. I have seen other examples that interpreted this as poison and painted that goop in some exotic color to represent that. -Trust me, this was almost Tesseract Green!
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Embrace the red. |
I decided that it was just a lot of blood and so I painted over it using
Wraithbone and then applied about two coats of a classic:
Blood For The Blood God.
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Ta-da, done! |
And after a bunch of cleanup using a variety of colors and minor highlights. I would say that the most important one being
Stormhost Silver for edge highlights on armor, blades and spikes.
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The Champs. |
After some grass tufts, they are now officially done! Yay! The temptation to do more detail work on their faces is strong, but for bulk fodder, I think I can stop here. I hope these guys look good to you all as well. Thanks again for reading all this!
*It seems that I never posted that article, so sorry about the mystery.