30 Gedanken zu „5 Tips to Choose Color Schemes – HC 371“
  1. Hey Vince I've got a strange army colour scheme problem that is admittedly entirely self inflicted that I was hoping you might be able to give some advice on how to execute it.

    When I was doing my "looking for inspiration" step with the Lumineth, I ended up coming across an image of a Dawnrider painted in this amazing Rainbow colour scheme that I was so inspired by I ended getting my first box of Wardens as a result.

    The problem is, I don't know how to realize this colour scheme on an army wide level. I have tons of cool ideas for the leaders and centerpieces (like having the cathallar have a dress that's red at the neckline but goes through the rainbow until it's purple at the bottom, or having the E&E twins each be half the rainbow, one warm one cold, or sticking a rainbow led in eltherion, or having the mountain cow be made of gemstones or bismuth instead of boring rock, or having the banner be an massively ornate pride flag) but I'm at a loss as to how to have that theme present on the smaller and more numberous battle line models.

    Like, the wardens for example, I've got the start of an idea (white armor, gold trim, rainbow plumes in their helmets) but then… How do I do their cloth skirts? The three ideas I've come up with are 1) have each member of the squad have a different primary cloth colour so that when they're lined up they make a rainbow together. 2) is just have every battleline squad have a different cloth colour and achieve a rainbow that way (like, red squad, orange squad etc.) And 3) is to just give up and have the primary cloth colour be the same across the entire army (maybe like blue or purple to contrast the gold)

    You haven't done a HC episode on rainbows in any capacity (I imagine because it's generally a mistake to try to include that maybe colours on a mini) but I'm committed enough to my cool leader idea that I want to make this work somehow, and I was hoping you'd either be able to tell me which oh my ideas work best, or have some fourth option I hadn't considered, or just some advice on how to pull this army concept together.

    Also, p.s. while my lumineth remain unpainted, HC as been invaluable for my Dark Angels and assorted d&d minis. So thanks for making all these videos.

  2. I have had this problem with my league of votann they are my first miniatures I have painted in 20+ years , I was thinking a light grey with possibly some purple but they have come out more like the white box art ones and I’m not to happy to be honest

  3. Ι cant stand the dark angels been shown with green shoulder pads and red bolters. I want to puke at the red bolters. So I changed these, the shoulder pads of the command staff and veterans I paint gold, and rank and file silver. For the bolters I switched it to a very light white. As you said those pictures are suggestions and by no means a set in stone scheme.

  4. There are great open source alternatives to things like Photoshop, Krita for example. Just in case you might want to see if a big scary program will help you, don't worry though, they're not so scary really. They do have some significant advantages though: Layers, different ways to combine the colour information on those layers ( a big one here is using a layer set to multiply or screen on top of an image of a grey model, as this is kind of like actually painting on the model), better selection tools like lasso, polygonal lasso or the magic wand (using those you could also do fast mockups of kitbashes up front)

  5. If I am not using more or less something that already exists, I'll usually go searching on here to see what goes with what, the rest of this is well beyond me. 😀 Well, even in the first example I'll usually come here to get help along the way.

  6. I am going thru your beginner stuff playlist and am quite happy (as a 62 year old beginner). I needed a logical approach. As I do Photoshop and illustrator stuff for a living I always have a command-z option, yet painting and building up figures hadn't made sense. Ninjon and Maniac turned me onto your channel. If you are in Minnesota, I would love to buy you a beer. Enjoy your week – Joe

  7. For a great many of mini/army painters their background isn't from anything creative, let alone using paint. So it can be daunting to come up with color themes without much experience. A good shortcut is look at things for inspiration. Maybe you like a certain car in a certain colorway and can apply that motif to your marines. Maybe some warcraft armor from a decade ago is your jam, paint that. Inspiration can come from anywhere, it doesnt have to be from your codex.

    When I do army painting I alter 1 part of the color pallet, or color layout, to make them my own and in some cases to make it more efficient to paint.

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