I have to say you're an excellent teacher. James wappel is a brilliant painter but i feel like he goes way to quickly for me to follow. Trying to follow his guides i had to put it at half speed to really grasp what was being taught. You explain things in a way that's easy to understand and follow along.
Very kind bro thank you. I think James is great! I’m just making the tutorials i wish i had when i was learning. I dont find people speeding through things helpful at all. Much rather share and teach than simply entertain. So ill do both 😂
Since Im in oilpainting it feels more like cooking ,and not like baking . Oilpainting is almost a crime :D and Im an oilpaint addict .Much love to you, Vince, James and all the others for sharing your oil cheats ,I love it and it is so relaxing, it all melts away in such a smooth way . Keep up the good work !
Good stuff! It should definitely be more relaxing than cooking tho 🤣 don’t have to eat it if it goes wrong LOL. But yeah very happy you’re enjoying the content! See you next week!
Even when I paint different, it's really interesting to watch all the different approaches with oil paints. Looking forward to the next parts and hope I can give this a try soon!
Right on brother! I remember your oil experiments with the Alpha Legion/White Scars on your IG some time back. Love the vibe your channel here on YT has got, rock on!
Great video! A lot of useful tips. There is a rule I heard "thick on thin/thin on thick". This reminds me that I haven't used my oil paints in a while. Need to get back to them!
This is great, the Crimson Fists are a personal favorite of mine. I really need to pick up a few oil paints to try out. Looking forward to the next parts.
Appreciate you making these videos, and adding the glaze part! So what I am trying to understand is the following, does starting with the glaze layer help with thinning the next layers, making it easier to work with the thicker paints on top? As in making it easier to do the fat over lean? And, whilst we are at it, what do you think of the way James Wappel prepares his colours, with the he always mixes them with white spirits to the consistency of acrylics, would that do something similar as the fat over lean? Also curious if we can expect a oil-paint brand review comparison in the future? Because for some reason I have heard mixed reviews about the scale oil paints.
always happy when you comment dude so keep it up! I've tried not to cover too much in these tutorials as it may be overwhelming for people who are familiar with oils but not confident just yet - some terms like fat over lean won't make sense yet for some. But yes, that's exactly the reason, it makes our layers smooth and prevents paint build up and "blobbyness we can get when not thinning our paint, and gives us definition when over thinning would make things overblended or muddy. as for James, I found thinning the paints before hand actually gave me less control because It wasn't clear how much thinner to paint was needed in the bottle itself. I may try again in the future, but this saves me some time for now. As for brand comparisons, I've watched a few but as you can see I don't think their accurate for what I've been able to achieve with them so far. I just think that each brand works slightly differently. I will defo do a paint review in the future as the channel grows :) Stay blessed homie
I have to say you're an excellent teacher. James wappel is a brilliant painter but i feel like he goes way to quickly for me to follow. Trying to follow his guides i had to put it at half speed to really grasp what was being taught. You explain things in a way that's easy to understand and follow along.
Very kind bro thank you. I think James is great! I’m just making the tutorials i wish i had when i was learning. I dont find people speeding through things helpful at all. Much rather share and teach than simply entertain. So ill do both 😂
Love the thumbnail mate
hahaha a top tier UI designer made it for me ill be sure to tell her
Love the colour explanation at the start! Great tutorial
Cheers homie glad it helped and made a difference
Since Im in oilpainting it feels more like cooking ,and not like baking . Oilpainting is almost a crime :D and Im an oilpaint addict .Much love to you, Vince, James and all the others for sharing your oil cheats ,I love it and it is so relaxing, it all melts away in such a smooth way . Keep up the good work !
Good stuff! It should definitely be more relaxing than cooking tho 🤣 don’t have to eat it if it goes wrong LOL. But yeah very happy you’re enjoying the content! See you next week!
So much fun getting the oilpaint colours into each others buisness, Im looking forward, cheers ! @@omegonedge
Like it . easy and concise . Thank you for sharing sir .
Glad it’s clear and easy to understand! See you in the next episode
Even when I paint different, it's really interesting to watch all the different approaches with oil paints. Looking forward to the next parts and hope I can give this a try soon!
Glad you’re enjoying it so far buddy, theres quite a bit out there! Hoping this will encourage more people to give it a try
More please. Can't wait for the next one
ahah thanks buddy, won't be long!
Aw yeah! been eagerly awaiting part 2!
happy it came early! I can get 2 vids a month out currently due to full time game designer job. But hopefully you'll stick around!
Right on brother! I remember your oil experiments with the Alpha Legion/White Scars on your IG some time back. Love the vibe your channel here on YT has got, rock on!
Will definitely do a video on those marines later in the year! Glad you’ve joined the legion! Stay blessed
Wonderful tutorial follow up from pt1 man!
High praise bro! From my own Sifu! Glad it makes sense g
I've definitely got to try my hands at oils! You make it look less intimidating bruv!
super approachable homie and not scary once you start, just requires a change of mindset from acrylics
Great videos! Slowly building up the courage to try oils on my Raven Guard.
Thanks homie! Black is a tricky color to do without it looking grey! Will cover that at some point too!
Great video! A lot of useful tips. There is a rule I heard "thick on thin/thin on thick".
This reminds me that I haven't used my oil paints in a while. Need to get back to them!
That’s exactly what this is buddy! Thanks for the nice comment too. When we go into the basics video I’ll be sure to cover all of that too 🥰
A master at work!
Hahah thanks so much! Getting there!
great tuto
very informative, been following on insta and your HH AL work for a while.
Glad you’re following me to the other side homie!
Great video!
thanks for the support buddy
This is great, the Crimson Fists are a personal favorite of mine. I really need to pick up a few oil paints to try out.
Looking forward to the next parts.
Aye mine too dude glad it’s making sense! Definitely pick some up! See you in the next one!
Appreciate you making these videos, and adding the glaze part! So what I am trying to understand is the following, does starting with the glaze layer help with thinning the next layers, making it easier to work with the thicker paints on top? As in making it easier to do the fat over lean? And, whilst we are at it, what do you think of the way James Wappel prepares his colours, with the he always mixes them with white spirits to the consistency of acrylics, would that do something similar as the fat over lean?
Also curious if we can expect a oil-paint brand review comparison in the future? Because for some reason I have heard mixed reviews about the scale oil paints.
always happy when you comment dude so keep it up!
I've tried not to cover too much in these tutorials as it may be overwhelming for people who are familiar with oils but not confident just yet - some terms like fat over lean won't make sense yet for some.
But yes, that's exactly the reason, it makes our layers smooth and prevents paint build up and "blobbyness we can get when not thinning our paint, and gives us definition when over thinning would make things overblended or muddy.
as for James, I found thinning the paints before hand actually gave me less control because It wasn't clear how much thinner to paint was needed in the bottle itself. I may try again in the future, but this saves me some time for now.
As for brand comparisons, I've watched a few but as you can see I don't think their accurate for what I've been able to achieve with them so far. I just think that each brand works slightly differently. I will defo do a paint review in the future as the channel grows :)
Stay blessed homie
@@omegonedge thanks for the reply, and for sure I will keep commenting. You stay blessed as well!
Great video! Do oil paints dry a shade darker like acrylics do? Just wondering if that needs to be taken into account when mixing your colours.
@@clive_maloney thanks homie! No they remain the same way as when they’re first applied- it’s one of the great benefits !