I really like your more simplistic painting videos. You really show that we can get good results with just a few basic steps. This is really helpful for people like me, who are painting for table and myself (rather than to wow others). I also think this looks better than slapchop, but that's personal preference.
Tbh you really are the only painting channel that I enjoy the personal flair. Duncan has the amazing meta nerd culture knowledge but you are just plain funny, keep it up!
The introductory statement to this video is some of the best meta commentary about *waves hand at everything* I've seen in a while. I wasn't ready for this level of profundity before my first cup of coffee.
If done right, dry brushing can save SOOO much time and look great. The true magic is understanding the different technics and how they can complement one another to make something amazing. Great video showcasing these styles.
I personally enjoy washes over contrast paints, right now Berserker Bloodshade over Blood Angels Red is working wonders for my Behemoth Tyranids. Super rich reds with nice dark actually contrasting detail and its super easy to do on the 2 billion models.
@@aaronbono4688 I've started mixing washes and speed paints together. I've also used some future in there too. Got some cool results for a thicker wash.
I’ve found that using a limited palette is a game changer. I have tried using multiple different colors on a model to get as much detail into a model, but it can get cluttered on the character very quickly. With my recent converted tomb king army, I chose a simple 3 color scheme (green, blue and bone) and subtle hints of bronze, I’ve made some of my best and most favorite paint jobs. I’m considering a tyrannid army after all the new releases, and I will probably use a bunch of washes and dry brushing (dry brushing is my favorite technique next to doing fades between colors). Thanks for the video and tips! Loved the look of your ‘Nids!
Love this video. Reminds me that simple techniques and busting out a model while just adhering to some color theory and being mindful about the order of your steps can still give you really nice looking results. Thanks for the remind Ninjon!
Another perfect painting video from Ninjon. I especially love that you keep the theme of each video concise, unlike a lot of other painters who tend to ramble, restate things and otherwise add bloat making their video 2 hours long. I really wanna see you try object source lighting, maybe on some Necrons??
Left the paint scene for like 15 years and came back to everyone talking about contrasts and slap chops, and they never looked as good as a simple wash and highlight job. Was a real “old man shakes paintbrush at clouds” moment for me.
left in 6th edition when they first time doing zenithal highlights over black. thought it was dumb then, now everyone's doing it. it's nice to see someone doing it right. although I dry brush after washing. then highlight
I agree 100% I'm 54 years young and have been playing since 2/3rd edition. Way back when WAAAGH!!! Orks was a thing. When i show up to a game or a GT/RTT folks are like "holy cow" that looks so good and they tell me that my paint style is so different. Even to let me know that i have an "Old School" look to my minis. I love it...Wash, Drybrush, Higlight, Detail...so on and so on.
I've been painting consistently for 30+ years. I think it comes down to time and effort spent. In the amount of time it takes to paint 10 models in layer, wash, highlight I can just about paint an entire army with speedpaints and that is not an exageration. I just painted 15 different models in about 4 hours. Enough for an entire necromunda game. And they look good enough to play with. I doubt i could have even basecoated the same 15 models in 4 hours with regular paints. If you don't love painting or painting is only a means to your actual hobby, that time savings is huge. Once you are proficient with speed paint, it is just SO much faster.
Gotta say, this video was awesome. Might think on trying it to try and speed up my legion painting. Though I think a good part of it is your well refined skillset and desire to experiment, I haven't dome so in a little while.
Not all of us left washes behind when people started pushing "new" techniques and forgeting about washes. :) Given your description of the AK washes matches how I feel about their regular paints, I'm very interested in the washes now. As a thought I think you need to revisit the "colour theory" converstation - perhaps less about the fancy colour works and more just general conversation about how similar colours work together and how accent colours that contrast are so powerful. The whole blue-grey tyranid on the orange base is a great example of this sort of "colour theory", even if you never looked at a colour wheel or worried about "triads" or "complementary schemes" etc. 3 things spring to mind after this video about washes: 1) You didn't cover Army Painter Tones - their wash range - the Light, Dark, & Strong are GW mimics, but their Blue, Purple and Red washes are great. 2) Washes are a great way to add depth and colour interest to a high flow paint (Contrast/Express/Speed etc) 3) You don't need to put the wash over the whole area. At 10:54 when you say you could have used a Black Wash and you're right - instead of covering the existent colour you could have quickly ran a little bit just down into the joins between the plates to help with their definition. A little bit of spill onto the lower plate doesn't really need correction, but you can drag it out to make the sort of lines you did for the first higlights to give more texture and depth to the plates.
It's so nice to get a different opinion on filling vs highlighting. I see a ton of other painters do multiple primers with a dry brush. Its good to see a base layer with a was and then a paint job.
Man, those AK paints look amazing. It's like that perfect compromise between a wash and a contrast paint; more pigment than a traditional wash, but not as gloopy as contrasts. Need to look into them I think
TLDR: no one included washes in their slapchop video so the entire industry forgot 😂 I use this over a harsh Zenithal (and typically some form of contrast/Xpress)
@@ArtisOpus it turns out I have a LOT to learn about dry brushing... I swear I had it mastered on battle mechs in the 90's but now it's TECHNICAL??? No more base/wash/dry brush/done...
Nice temperature contrast on that model too! I also think that using dry brush verses edge highlighting with some thicker paint depends on how glossy verses matte you want a material to look on the model.
Your last two videos have been very helpful in the Techno Mancer Style!! Your spin and production with this more refined teaching style is brilliant Jon!! Good for you and us!! Great job!
Although I have a few contrast, speedpaints and Xpress paints, I still tend to use base coat, wash, highlight for a lot of my models. I tend to mix my washes using equal parts Vallejo ink (usually black, sepia or a mix of the two), Vallejo matt varnish and water.
Can't help but feel that we all just get swept along with the new painting craze and forget that the old reliable techniques are just as good, if not better for 90% of what we need. I certainly do!
You gotta up that persentage. I think his basic painting is probably better that at least 90% of painters. All about colour choice and brush control...
Your workspace looks so nice. If I showed mine, it’d probably give you an aneurysm. Edit: I love how you accept your mistakes and build on them, even though your models always look amazing.
This is awesome! I think the thing with any painting technique is... technique... you did a "cheat" technique, but still manage to make it look killer because you've practiced it a lot and know how to tweak it and prioritize things like edge highlighting to make it stand out still. I think we tend to look for the "easy" thing to do, and when it doesn't look good, give upon it, rather than realizing there's still a technique and skill required to make it look good.
Fantastic. I love the focus on how long the technique takes. I often watch videos to observe new techniques and there is no indication of how time consuming it can be so I don’t really know if it will benefit me overall. Displaying a timer on screen or something to give an indication of how long each step takes would be amazing, so even if we are slower or faster we get a sent of what proportion of time each should take.
Thanks as someone with nerve damage and shacking hands this was very helpful. I have been out of the hobby of painting for years. Using a lighter base coat with colored washes wasn't something we did in the 90's. My kids purchased my first sets of washes and inks for Christmas this year and they have sat there because I wasn't confident in how to use them and painting is very frustrating when you used to be good at detailed work but can no longer physically achieve the results of old. These relatively new product and videos like this I have found very helpful. Thank you.
Good stuff as always Jon! Weirdly enough I've been kind of revisiting washes lately too, so the timing is perfect! I'm also about to finish my Tyranid half of Leviathan so it's even more timely. Great video!
Thanks for the video, Ninjon. These look amazing with no complicated technique. I will use exactly these tips to get my 9 year old son to paint his first minis. THANKS!
I feel like lately I've hit a plateau and have been almost over trying to much frustration. These videos lately that you've been getting back to basics have been nice to refresh and restart without being so critical
Instead of painting the warm areas after, paint them before the wash. The tiny changes the overall color of both the warm areas and the skin giving it the same effect but it’s easier to correct if you mess up during paining the warm areas.
I recognize your shirt!!! Go go Kingdom Death!!!!! All hail the Dragon God! I love 40k and love your videos, and love seeing that you're a fan of that incredible board game!
Those AK washes are looking really interesting. I've really fallen in love with their 3rd gen acrylics recently after stumbling upon a local store that stocks them. Gonna have to wait and see if my local store will start stocking these as well.
Army painter gets (pretty rightly) written off next to other layer paints, but I honestly think that washes are where they shine. The army painter quickshade washes are fantastic, and one of the best early purchases I made way back when I first started painting minis.
Yeah, I was really surprised he didn’t test them out in this video. Army painter washes are great and imo have been much better than the last two generations of citadel.
My only issue with the Pro-Acryl washes is how quickly it dries on my wet palette. It is the only brand that dries so quickly on a wet palette. Otherwise they're another good product from an excellent brand. Their Miracle Glaze and Wash medium is magic.
Base color, wash, dry brush got many a mini of mine on the table back in the day. Coming from the age of "talent in a bottle" badab black wash and devlin mud i highly recommend Army Painter dark and strong tone.
Hey Jon, I was wondering, at 12:25 you mentioned taking paint off your brush (for drybrushing) on a non-absorbent surface. I've been using paper towels for the longest time and I was wondering what to use instead that is non-absorbent to remove the paint but not moisture. Thanks.
Oy man, not Jon... however, you're probably looking for a texture pallet. You can make a few of them for a few dollars or buy one from most hobby paint sources.
I would love to know please Ninjon what are the base color and the washes for the green schemes you show in the video in the minute 06:07 thanks in advance!
Was kind of hoping to see Vallejo washes in this video. Understandable however if you didn't have them if you didn't have them on hand. Was wondering how they compared to the overall citadel washes and such. I planned on getting some to try out since they seem to have comparison colors to Citadel. However, haven't been able to find any kind comparison video over Vallejo washes. Love this video. I do enjoy washes on some, specially something with a lot of creases or creases that are hard to reach and gives it more of a well shaded look. It works so well in those, then toss a nice layer on top to bring out the raised edges. Smooth surfaces can make it look weird and pooly.
I don't know anything about painting figures but your logo design is striking. The craft of graphic design, in this computer age, has gone down the toilet. It's nice to see someone that knows what there doing.
Both those minis look fabulous, cracking video Jon :) Not a big fan of painting so anything that cuts the painting time down is a big plus in my book :)
I find that most of my time is trying to prevent and then subsequently fix mistakes in small areas where I get a color where it wasn't supposed to be. A big culprit is basecoating edges like where the carapace meets the skin. When you have two different materials with wildly different hues and saturation, how do you approach painting those connecting areas?
I like to make my own washes with Matt medium, water, ink, and a bit of dish soap. Maybe in a future video you could experiment with using washes in this way?
Hopefully this gets found, saw this tip on a TikTok or youtube short somewhere. If you put contrast medium over a glossy shade after it dries it will take away the gloss. Been using this trick for a little while.
As some additional info for anyone shopping around, the washes from GSW tend to dry pretty glossy as well, and their depiction of the colors online doesn't really match up with what the colors actually end up looking like. They can still be useful paints to have, if you know that though, i use them for terrain when I plan to put a water effect over them for example, or for slimier parts on monster minis. Their Intensity Inks can make for cheaper alternatives to Contrasts as well, most of those dry pretty satin, their Opulentus Black is great for black armor and carapaces. Also, Targor Rageshade is great over metallics to add a touch of complexity and color variation, especially on silvers and gunmetals, for stuff like exhaust manifolds and flamethrowers.
I never stopped using this technique. I paint units and armies by base coating, washing, dry brushing and then maybe a quick highlight in a couple of key areas e.g. faces and shields. You can rattle through a normal rank and file miniature in 30 - 40 minutes by batch painting in this way and I’m happy with the results!
I would love to see a video where you focus on painting white! I’m starting to get to a point where I like my routine but feel like I could still improve on getting it smooth and looking great
Great video, although I see a lot of RUclips painters use AK Interactive paints but they are not easy or cheap to get in the states. If anyone knows a place I would love to know.
I learnt how to paint before washes and shades were on the market, and they were a huge game changer, but sometimes I find myself still making my own washes like when I started.
I was thinking of doing a pale blue/grey skin for my marauders (the not-orks from Mantic's Deadzone/Firefight game) ... and the pale blue for that model might be worth copying.
Ay Ninjon, whats the trick to doing those small straight lines on the carapace? painted 7 of the new gaunts so far, havnt really gotten it yet. Is it a consistency of the paint kind of thing? using a fresh size 1 brush of decent quality (the AK abteilung502 ones)
Man I love the way you painted these models and the concepts are solid. But my biggest issue when trying to paint fine detail like edge highlights is my brushes seem to get frayed and can't keep a fine point. Got any tips on brush maintenance?
Good day kind sir Ninjon. I know this question is off topic but I have a very curious question about your paints. How do you manage to maintain all of those paints you have? how often you shake them to prevent them from settling? and if i may ask also how do you do this process given the amount of containers you have? one by one? by batch? just curious.
PAINT THE BIG NID BOi!!!!!!!
Wait twenty months and he’ll probably consider it
Waiting on the sea monster kitbash!
This needs to be the top comment on every video till its done
Did he ever paint things he built ?
Easily the best mini painter on YT. Thanks for staying true to yourself and creating BANGERS every single time!
I really like your more simplistic painting videos. You really show that we can get good results with just a few basic steps. This is really helpful for people like me, who are painting for table and myself (rather than to wow others). I also think this looks better than slapchop, but that's personal preference.
Tbh you really are the only painting channel that I enjoy the personal flair. Duncan has the amazing meta nerd culture knowledge but you are just plain funny, keep it up!
Wait this is a painting channel?? I thought it was comedy 😉
Sam Lenz for the raw oldschool artist vibes and Ninjon are the only watchable ones for me.
The introductory statement to this video is some of the best meta commentary about *waves hand at everything* I've seen in a while. I wasn't ready for this level of profundity before my first cup of coffee.
Wow that initial blue Tyranid is probably one of my fave paint schemes I've seen!
i was totally thinking the same, the colours go SOO WELL together
@@GheyForGames🎉
If done right, dry brushing can save SOOO much time and look great. The true magic is understanding the different technics and how they can complement one another to make something amazing. Great video showcasing these styles.
I personally enjoy washes over contrast paints, right now Berserker Bloodshade over Blood Angels Red is working wonders for my Behemoth Tyranids. Super rich reds with nice dark actually contrasting detail and its super easy to do on the 2 billion models.
I mix up washes and contrast paints because sometimes contrast paints look better for some things while washes do a better job with other things.
@@aaronbono4688 I've started mixing washes and speed paints together. I've also used some future in there too. Got some cool results for a thicker wash.
I’ve found that using a limited palette is a game changer. I have tried using multiple different colors on a model to get as much detail into a model, but it can get cluttered on the character very quickly. With my recent converted tomb king army, I chose a simple 3 color scheme (green, blue and bone) and subtle hints of bronze, I’ve made some of my best and most favorite paint jobs. I’m considering a tyrannid army after all the new releases, and I will probably use a bunch of washes and dry brushing (dry brushing is my favorite technique next to doing fades between colors). Thanks for the video and tips! Loved the look of your ‘Nids!
Thanks!
Love this video. Reminds me that simple techniques and busting out a model while just adhering to some color theory and being mindful about the order of your steps can still give you really nice looking results. Thanks for the remind Ninjon!
Another perfect painting video from Ninjon. I especially love that you keep the theme of each video concise, unlike a lot of other painters who tend to ramble, restate things and otherwise add bloat making their video 2 hours long.
I really wanna see you try object source lighting, maybe on some Necrons??
Lovely work as ever - and excellent use of your Big D!
phrasing!
Left the paint scene for like 15 years and came back to everyone talking about contrasts and slap chops, and they never looked as good as a simple wash and highlight job. Was a real “old man shakes paintbrush at clouds” moment for me.
left in 6th edition when they first time doing zenithal highlights over black. thought it was dumb then, now everyone's doing it. it's nice to see someone doing it right. although I dry brush after washing. then highlight
I use both techniques depending on what I want to do. It's easier to do blends with contrast but the layer technique is unmatched for highlights
I agree 100% I'm 54 years young and have been playing since 2/3rd edition. Way back when WAAAGH!!! Orks was a thing. When i show up to a game or a GT/RTT folks are like "holy cow" that looks so good and they tell me that my paint style is so different. Even to let me know that i have an "Old School" look to my minis.
I love it...Wash, Drybrush, Higlight, Detail...so on and so on.
@@everymans40ktry not to disparage painting styles and techniques. It's that kind of attitude that points people away from the hobby.
I've been painting consistently for 30+ years. I think it comes down to time and effort spent. In the amount of time it takes to paint 10 models in layer, wash, highlight I can just about paint an entire army with speedpaints and that is not an exageration. I just painted 15 different models in about 4 hours. Enough for an entire necromunda game. And they look good enough to play with. I doubt i could have even basecoated the same 15 models in 4 hours with regular paints. If you don't love painting or painting is only a means to your actual hobby, that time savings is huge. Once you are proficient with speed paint, it is just SO much faster.
Gotta say, this video was awesome. Might think on trying it to try and speed up my legion painting. Though I think a good part of it is your well refined skillset and desire to experiment, I haven't dome so in a little while.
Not all of us left washes behind when people started pushing "new" techniques and forgeting about washes. :)
Given your description of the AK washes matches how I feel about their regular paints, I'm very interested in the washes now.
As a thought I think you need to revisit the "colour theory" converstation - perhaps less about the fancy colour works and more just general conversation about how similar colours work together and how accent colours that contrast are so powerful. The whole blue-grey tyranid on the orange base is a great example of this sort of "colour theory", even if you never looked at a colour wheel or worried about "triads" or "complementary schemes" etc.
3 things spring to mind after this video about washes:
1) You didn't cover Army Painter Tones - their wash range - the Light, Dark, & Strong are GW mimics, but their Blue, Purple and Red washes are great.
2) Washes are a great way to add depth and colour interest to a high flow paint (Contrast/Express/Speed etc)
3) You don't need to put the wash over the whole area. At 10:54 when you say you could have used a Black Wash and you're right - instead of covering the existent colour you could have quickly ran a little bit just down into the joins between the plates to help with their definition. A little bit of spill onto the lower plate doesn't really need correction, but you can drag it out to make the sort of lines you did for the first higlights to give more texture and depth to the plates.
It's so nice to get a different opinion on filling vs highlighting. I see a ton of other painters do multiple primers with a dry brush. Its good to see a base layer with a was and then a paint job.
Man, those AK paints look amazing. It's like that perfect compromise between a wash and a contrast paint; more pigment than a traditional wash, but not as gloopy as contrasts. Need to look into them I think
I just bought a whole bunch. I'm not even sure you need to dilute them for basecoat. They are very versatile and dry to a pretty matte finish.
TLDR: no one included washes in their slapchop video so the entire industry forgot 😂
I use this over a harsh Zenithal (and typically some form of contrast/Xpress)
*Ahem* ;)
@@ArtisOpus it turns out I have a LOT to learn about dry brushing... I swear I had it mastered on battle mechs in the 90's but now it's TECHNICAL??? No more base/wash/dry brush/done...
Nice temperature contrast on that model too! I also think that using dry brush verses edge highlighting with some thicker paint depends on how glossy verses matte you want a material to look on the model.
Favorite mini painting intro. Never change it.
Your tutorials have been fire lately. Probably the number one channel for learning new techniques and why to do them.
Your last two videos have been very helpful in the Techno Mancer Style!! Your spin and production with this more refined teaching style is brilliant Jon!! Good for you and us!! Great job!
As someone who does the whole basecoat, wash, drybrush most of the time ... great to see. Table top ready.
Although I have a few contrast, speedpaints and Xpress paints, I still tend to use base coat, wash, highlight for a lot of my models. I tend to mix my washes using equal parts Vallejo ink (usually black, sepia or a mix of the two), Vallejo matt varnish and water.
Can't help but feel that we all just get swept along with the new painting craze and forget that the old reliable techniques are just as good, if not better for 90% of what we need. I certainly do!
Ninjon goes "back to the basics" and still paints it better than 70% of the people in the hobby. 😂 Nice bugs man.👍
You gotta up that persentage. I think his basic painting is probably better that at least 90% of painters. All about colour choice and brush control...
what did you expect from somebody who has a youtube channel about painting minis with 200k subs? being average?
I just got started with miniature painting, and it's your videos like these that make me feel more comfortable as a beginner.
Your workspace looks so nice. If I showed mine, it’d probably give you an aneurysm.
Edit: I love how you accept your mistakes and build on them, even though your models always look amazing.
This is awesome! I think the thing with any painting technique is... technique... you did a "cheat" technique, but still manage to make it look killer because you've practiced it a lot and know how to tweak it and prioritize things like edge highlighting to make it stand out still. I think we tend to look for the "easy" thing to do, and when it doesn't look good, give upon it, rather than realizing there's still a technique and skill required to make it look good.
Fantastic. I love the focus on how long the technique takes. I often watch videos to observe new techniques and there is no indication of how time consuming it can be so I don’t really know if it will benefit me overall. Displaying a timer on screen or something to give an indication of how long each step takes would be amazing, so even if we are slower or faster we get a sent of what proportion of time each should take.
I can’t believe one of these takes you just an hour. Amazing skill Ninjon!
Thanks as someone with nerve damage and shacking hands this was very helpful. I have been out of the hobby of painting for years. Using a lighter base coat with colored washes wasn't something we did in the 90's. My kids purchased my first sets of washes and inks for Christmas this year and they have sat there because I wasn't confident in how to use them and painting is very frustrating when you used to be good at detailed work but can no longer physically achieve the results of old. These relatively new product and videos like this I have found very helpful. Thank you.
For a moment there I was like, what, of course we had washes in the 90s... And then I remembered, oh wait, no, we used one wash - flesh 😂
Good stuff as always Jon! Weirdly enough I've been kind of revisiting washes lately too, so the timing is perfect! I'm also about to finish my Tyranid half of Leviathan so it's even more timely. Great video!
Watching you edge highlight is so satisfying! It's the thing I have the most trouble with by far.
Thanks for the video, Ninjon. These look amazing with no complicated technique. I will use exactly these tips to get my 9 year old son to paint his first minis. THANKS!
I feel like lately I've hit a plateau and have been almost over trying to much frustration. These videos lately that you've been getting back to basics have been nice to refresh and restart without being so critical
Time is my most important asset. This back to basic is just what I needed! Thanks!
Great video!
My go to wash lately has been just to mix flow aid, water, medium and whatever colour paint I need right on my pallette.
That first one looks absolutely awesome. Makes me want to paint an army in that paint scheme.
Instead of painting the warm areas after, paint them before the wash. The tiny changes the overall color of both the warm areas and the skin giving it the same effect but it’s easier to correct if you mess up during paining the warm areas.
I recognize your shirt!!! Go go Kingdom Death!!!!! All hail the Dragon God!
I love 40k and love your videos, and love seeing that you're a fan of that incredible board game!
Great video as always and yes the more we paint not only do we get better in the hobby , we paint faster, so profound.
Those AK washes are looking really interesting. I've really fallen in love with their 3rd gen acrylics recently after stumbling upon a local store that stocks them. Gonna have to wait and see if my local store will start stocking these as well.
Always good content. Also, never ever change that beginning montage.
I gotta say that blue tyranid is maybe my favorite of all the outcomes I've seen from videos on the new models.
That was an awesome tip for the removing of the paint to avoid the chalky dry brush results. Really liked that tip!
@Ninjon What basecolor did you use for the green tyranid? I must have missed it. I plan on doing that scheme with some modifications.
I think it’s ak green sky
Question. do you have a video going over how you transfer your potted citadel paints to dropper bottles? i'm thinking of doing the same.
Army painter gets (pretty rightly) written off next to other layer paints, but I honestly think that washes are where they shine. The army painter quickshade washes are fantastic, and one of the best early purchases I made way back when I first started painting minis.
Yeah, I was really surprised he didn’t test them out in this video. Army painter washes are great and imo have been much better than the last two generations of citadel.
I was going to comment the same thing. The Quickshade set is only like 30$ USD so it's an easy purchase and great for experimenting.
My only issue with the Pro-Acryl washes is how quickly it dries on my wet palette. It is the only brand that dries so quickly on a wet palette. Otherwise they're another good product from an excellent brand. Their Miracle Glaze and Wash medium is magic.
One of my favorite videos so far!
Can we please have the list of paints you used for the model that you painted in the video? Pretty please
Great video. Very straight forward, very educational, very understandable.
Going to have to try this, looks awesome.
Started using my army painter washes, this helped me so much thank you
Base color, wash, dry brush got many a mini of mine on the table back in the day. Coming from the age of "talent in a bottle" badab black wash and devlin mud i highly recommend Army Painter dark and strong tone.
Thanks for my lol of the day. you style of presentation is just so real but also hilariously funny and entertaining
Hey Jon, I was wondering, at 12:25 you mentioned taking paint off your brush (for drybrushing) on a non-absorbent surface.
I've been using paper towels for the longest time and I was wondering what to use instead that is non-absorbent to remove the paint but not moisture.
Thanks.
Oy man, not Jon... however, you're probably looking for a texture pallet. You can make a few of them for a few dollars or buy one from most hobby paint sources.
@@BullScrapPracEff cool, thanks for letting me know!
I would love to know please Ninjon what are the base color and the washes for the green schemes you show in the video in the minute 06:07 thanks in advance!
Awesome video, it brings back memories. I use to do this process until Contrast came out.
Was kind of hoping to see Vallejo washes in this video. Understandable however if you didn't have them if you didn't have them on hand. Was wondering how they compared to the overall citadel washes and such. I planned on getting some to try out since they seem to have comparison colors to Citadel. However, haven't been able to find any kind comparison video over Vallejo washes.
Love this video. I do enjoy washes on some, specially something with a lot of creases or creases that are hard to reach and gives it more of a well shaded look. It works so well in those, then toss a nice layer on top to bring out the raised edges. Smooth surfaces can make it look weird and pooly.
Great vid, loving the TwoThinCoats battle mud wash, as a replacement for the old agrax, sometimes I want that tint
Love that yellow / orange base on the first one. Going to steal it.
That's cool I'm going to give both a try thanks
Hi!
This is an awesome Video with great painted Tyranids. Thanks Ninjon ❤.
Greetings from Germany
Ruberius
Those are some of the coolest Tyranids I've seen in a long, long time. Kudos man!
Super cool video! Should I start a new tyranid army?
"There's no edge highlighting here, we don't have time for it."
"Okay next I'm going to edge highlight"
I don't know anything about painting figures but your logo design is striking. The craft of graphic design, in this computer age, has gone down the toilet. It's nice to see someone that knows what there doing.
Spelling and grammar is the thing that has actually gone out the window. It is their not there and stop kissing ass.
Both those minis look fabulous, cracking video Jon :)
Not a big fan of painting so anything that cuts the painting time down is a big plus in my book :)
I find that most of my time is trying to prevent and then subsequently fix mistakes in small areas where I get a color where it wasn't supposed to be. A big culprit is basecoating edges like where the carapace meets the skin. When you have two different materials with wildly different hues and saturation, how do you approach painting those connecting areas?
Good boy NinJon! 🍻👊🥰
I like to make my own washes with Matt medium, water, ink, and a bit of dish soap. Maybe in a future video you could experiment with using washes in this way?
I hate that everyone has joke intros but this one I liked for whatever reason. Your stuff is helpful and awesome! Thanks brother
Hates a strong word but whatever lol
Great footage on the highlight steps ! Well done video.
Hopefully this gets found, saw this tip on a TikTok or youtube short somewhere. If you put contrast medium over a glossy shade after it dries it will take away the gloss. Been using this trick for a little while.
As some additional info for anyone shopping around, the washes from GSW tend to dry pretty glossy as well, and their depiction of the colors online doesn't really match up with what the colors actually end up looking like. They can still be useful paints to have, if you know that though, i use them for terrain when I plan to put a water effect over them for example, or for slimier parts on monster minis. Their Intensity Inks can make for cheaper alternatives to Contrasts as well, most of those dry pretty satin, their Opulentus Black is great for black armor and carapaces. Also, Targor Rageshade is great over metallics to add a touch of complexity and color variation, especially on silvers and gunmetals, for stuff like exhaust manifolds and flamethrowers.
The content of this video is great! Really good tips and tricks. Thank you!
@Ninjon what primer did you use on the grey/blue nid model??? Seen at 1:09 within the video.
LOOK at all dem colors you have there!
I never stopped using this technique. I paint units and armies by base coating, washing, dry brushing and then maybe a quick highlight in a couple of key areas e.g. faces and shields. You can rattle through a normal rank and file miniature in 30 - 40 minutes by batch painting in this way and I’m happy with the results!
I would love to see a video where you focus on painting white! I’m starting to get to a point where I like my routine but feel like I could still improve on getting it smooth and looking great
those deep shades look really nice. didnt see cofee staining at all gets nicely in the deep area and it tints that hight in that middle ground.
First time seeing your channel. Honestly, impressed. Definitely subscribing.
Dam, they look awesome! Thanks for the content Jon.
What was the citadel match for the AK deep moonblue? I can't find it anywhere
@Ninjon What paint racks do you use to store all of those paints behind you?
I still feel scale-modelers/railroaders slowly take a sip and shake their head at all the things we minigamers rediscover. 😉
Great video, although I see a lot of RUclips painters use AK Interactive paints but they are not easy or cheap to get in the states. If anyone knows a place I would love to know.
If Ninjon decides to go really old school and try The Dip, I'm here for it.
I learnt how to paint before washes and shades were on the market, and they were a huge game changer, but sometimes I find myself still making my own washes like when I started.
I was thinking of doing a pale blue/grey skin for my marauders (the not-orks from Mantic's Deadzone/Firefight game) ... and the pale blue for that model might be worth copying.
Ay Ninjon, whats the trick to doing those small straight lines on the carapace? painted 7 of the new gaunts so far, havnt really gotten it yet. Is it a consistency of the paint kind of thing? using a fresh size 1 brush of decent quality (the AK abteilung502 ones)
Man I love the way you painted these models and the concepts are solid. But my biggest issue when trying to paint fine detail like edge highlights is my brushes seem to get frayed and can't keep a fine point. Got any tips on brush maintenance?
What Ak color did you use for the carapace? Strong Dark B... what, blue?
Slapchop got me painting again after 9 years, trovarian’s technique got me happy with a paint job after 14.
Good day kind sir Ninjon. I know this question is off topic but I have a very curious question about your paints. How do you manage to maintain all of those paints you have? how often you shake them to prevent them from settling? and if i may ask also how do you do this process given the amount of containers you have? one by one? by batch? just curious.
God, dood...your videos are so well edited, I learn so much and you always make me laugh. Cheers!
Gonna give those AK Deep Shades a try, thanks for showing them!