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Salutations from a complete novice. What's your recommendations to get started?

Salutations from a complete novice. What's your recommendations to get started?

Note: A FLGS in town actually has a mini-painting workstation that you can use for $5/session, or as part of their monthly subscription for playing TTRPGs onsite. Since I play PF2E there several times a week I have that subscription. So I have a place to paint that's already kitted out with just about anything you could need for mini-painting. (I think they charge extra if you want to add stuff like grass, sand, etc. to the mini, but the primer, paints, sealers, etc. are all included.)

I have two awesome minis arriving soon that are unpainted, so I'm looking for online sites/videos that start from "I know nothing" and work up from there.

Thanks in advance for any and all guidance you can provide!

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13 comments
  • I'm relatively new, and I've gotten a lot better over the course of a couple months.

    My top tips:

    1. The journey is the destination.

    It's trite, but true. You aren't painting for anyone else. Paint a model then move on, improvement is slow and perfection is unattainable.

    1. No matter how "bad" you think your paint job is it looks better than a bare mini.

    If you doubt me, just slap some paints on a mini and put it on a table with a handful of unpainted minis. You'll see how much better the painted one looks and how many more details you can see.

    1. Don't worry about mistakes.

    No one will see that tiny bit of blue on wrong spot. Realistically you'll only really see the top and back of the mini.

    1. Highlight one more time than you think you need.

    When you get to the point of "should I push this orange more yellow" or "is pure white too much here"? The answer is always one more highlight.

    1. Try new things.

    You'll see different painting techniques, try them, worst case you don't like it, in which case look at tips 1-3

    1. Equipment you want

    A #1, #0 and #00 brush. You can do fine with just a #1, the other two are bonuses.

    Brush soap. It saves your brushes.

    A wet pallet.

    Paint, but specially a cheap artists white and black in addition to any mini paints. If you want to go crazy a mixing white is good too.

    That's it. Remember it's fun and looks way cooler than an grey blob on the table. You'll get better with practice.

    6
  • Oh wow, I am the anti-speedpaint user here. SpeedPaint has some applications but it’s better I think to learn the fundamentals with traditional paints, and then use the knowledge and foundation to strategically use speedpaints. I have seen many people start with speedpaints and never progress beyond using them in a very basic way. They are also way expensive for what they are.

    Speedpaints are in a way similar to washes in that they have their uses, but you’ll have a lot of voices telling you to just throw them on a model and call it a day. I think that’s like teaching somebody how to build a raft and then letting them drift off into the ocean. It’s very partial advice that doesn’t work without a little more. Learning how to work with traditional paints gives a stronger foundation from which to branch off.

    When using washes, there are two main ways to apply: All over or lining/pinwashing. Simple idea. All over you get a big brush and spread the wash over the whole area or even whole model. Lining is more delicate as you trace lines or pull wash into recesses. Both are useful, but I have found that many people, especially new painters will only do all over washing. It’s tempting since it is fast, however it darkens and muddies the whole area. Sometimes you want that, other times you don’t. The result is you either leave the model dark, and possibly not great looking, or you do a touch up and repaint the raised areas- which can be very time consuming. Think about that backend work when you are tempted to put wash all over a model and decide if it’s worth it.

    YouTube-wise I think the Duncan Rhodes Painting Academy is the channel for beginners.

    An early tip would be patience. When you you use wash or SpeedPaint, or even a layer of traditional paint that’s going a bit slow, you don’t want to accidentally brush over it while it’s still wet, and ruin your progress. Something that helps with this in wargaming is getting comfortable doing a squad at a time. You can rotate which model you are doing to reduce your downtime while you wait.

    Brush care is very important. Clean out with water often, change out the brush water entirely if you used metallic paints, and at the end of a session some brush cleaner like Masters Cleaner & Preserver can very much extend the life of brushes.

    Keep old semi-retired brushes around to do more junky work like stippling or rough drybrushing.

    I still use a dry palette (yes really) and when I mix water into my paint I use a dropper bottle or pipette of very clean water, which helps reduce contamination and give control of exactly how much I add.

    Layering and underpainting is important and saves a lot of headache. While it is possible to paint yellow directly over a black prime, trust me you don’t want to do it. You want intermediate colors. Check YouTube for precise details on colors choices, but be aware.

    I am wary of using true black or true white as a main color. As a primer layer, they are fine, but if you are painting black or white armor you don’t actually want to mainly use black and white. Black can’t be shaded, so for “black” armor making it mainly a dark grey allows for shading the recesses which allows the model to have visible definition. White paint is difficult to work with and almost always has poor coverage. A light grey that is edged or highlighted with pure white will look like white while being much easier to apply.

    Once you start painting in a way you like, keep a painting journal. Either physical or a word document that records what paints you used and any special way you applied them. This is a help to your future self when you want to reuse a technique or paint an army consistently.

    4
  • Hey I am currently also looking out for Tipps to begin with. Especially for Warhammer Kill Team.

    Question to the more mature painters. How do you select your paints? I see tutorials with like 20-30 different paints and although I understand why they are used, the paint recommendation of Warhammer includes like 4-5 colours. This seems more reasonable to me.

    Do i need a set of base colours or do I just need primer and the one "base" colour given in the recommendation?

    And the last question is, if I can't even choose colours, is this the right hobby for me?

    3
  • Thin your paints.

    If the LGS station offers a wet palette make sure to use it or have someone explain it to you if it feels confusing.

    Nowadays we have tons of fairly specialised chemistry at our hands, often designed specially for miniatures. If you have this option ask around about contrast paints and their analogs from other companies as they sometimes make painting much easier.

    Most of the time it is possible to strip paint from a miniature if you're unhappy with a result. It usually means cleaning the entire mini, but keep in mind that a "reset button" exists and ab unsatisfactorily painted mini is not wasted.

    If you want to try to paint a detailed face either start painting with face or even better don't attach head if the mini is not pre-assembled. Makes it easier to clean up and manouver around.

    1
  • You're probably done with your 2 minis by now but the painting journey never ends so I'll share my personal experience as a novice too. I will second everything that others said and will not repeat all the great advise. I'll only add the 4 tools that really improved my painting (alongside with paintbrushes and wet palette):

    1. A pair of magnifying glass: something around 2.75x is usually the recommended default magnification power
    2. A cheap though quality airbrush: GSI Creos PS-270 (I let you check the reviews)
    3. A paintbrush cleaner: the one from "The Masters"
    4. A good light: it's important to have one between 5000K and 6000K because white light equals less color distortion

    No need to go crazy and spend hundreds of dollars on equipment to achieve good results, especially for beginners.

    As far as techniques, I've learnt a lot from squidmar's and ninjon's videos. Look at them, feel impressed, try it, and feel proud of yourself :)

    1
  • Go to the Warhammer store if you're brand new and have no one to introduce you to basic concepts. the Warhammer employees will give you a mini, and sit there and teach you how to paint it, from start to finish. They will provide the paint the brush the water pot, and the mini, all for free.

    If you don't buy anything from them, that's fine, just thank them and walk out with your mini.

    This is how I got started last year, and it opened the door to a wider world. Youtube videos and amazing painters who use interesting techniques have taken up my 2023 time as well. Gravitate towards painters who do not paint warhammer exclusively, they tend to have good opinions, and give great guidance outside of what Games Workshop would have you believe.

    If you get stuck in a rut, don't feel down, just take a break, and think about something else.

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