spiritofcat wrote:That's pretty good.
For the joints, I think some people just leave them un-painted. That would be fine for the hip joints in this figure, but those elbow ones are very visible, so I'm not sure what is best to do.
The way you've painted the green and grey parts is interesting. I don't know if it is an intentional technique to make it look weathered, but there are quite a few places where there is black showing through from under the green or grey. It looks okay if that's the look you were going for, though there are probably better (Read as more professional looking) ways of achieving that effect, but if you wanted solid colour it would benefit from another coat or two on those areas.
Quaternion wrote:spiritofcat wrote:That's pretty good.
For the joints, I think some people just leave them un-painted. That would be fine for the hip joints in this figure, but those elbow ones are very visible, so I'm not sure what is best to do.
The way you've painted the green and grey parts is interesting. I don't know if it is an intentional technique to make it look weathered, but there are quite a few places where there is black showing through from under the green or grey. It looks okay if that's the look you were going for, though there are probably better (Read as more professional looking) ways of achieving that effect, but if you wanted solid colour it would benefit from another coat or two on those areas.
I was going for the weathered look. Do you have any links to tutorials for better techniques?
spiritofcat wrote:Quaternion wrote:spiritofcat wrote:That's pretty good.
For the joints, I think some people just leave them un-painted. That would be fine for the hip joints in this figure, but those elbow ones are very visible, so I'm not sure what is best to do.
The way you've painted the green and grey parts is interesting. I don't know if it is an intentional technique to make it look weathered, but there are quite a few places where there is black showing through from under the green or grey. It looks okay if that's the look you were going for, though there are probably better (Read as more professional looking) ways of achieving that effect, but if you wanted solid colour it would benefit from another coat or two on those areas.
I was going for the weathered look. Do you have any links to tutorials for better techniques?
Have you had a look at Jin's tutorials? http://www.jinsaotomesdangeroustoys.com/guides.html
Registered users: Bing [Bot], Gauntlet101010, Google [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], Majestic-12 [Bot], MSN [Bot], TF-fan kev777, Yahoo [Bot], ZeroWolf