What started out as just putting a fresh coat of paint onto minis turned into a full scale hobby and addiction, and even some commissions as my technique improved.
I actually painted my first two figures back on the 30th of December 2015.
The two at the front are my work and the one skulking at the back is Marisa's |
In early January I focused on painting a handful of cheap miniatures I picked up for free at our local Games shop, Marquee Models. On the 9th January 2016 I moved onto my Space Marines.
They were all re-based a month ago but the paint jobs remain unchanged. |
After this I took it upon myself to paint a base sets worth of Zombicide Black Plague. This was in an effort to improve my skills so that I was ready for Blood Rage. From the 23rd of June to the 31st of August 2015, I managed to paint the entire set of zombies and a bunch of heroes (None of the starting 6).
The carnival crew! Day of the Deadish zombies/NPCs for DnD. I enjoyed the colour scheme but felt painting anymore would make them less special.
Deciding to go for a more zombie theme I went for the rotting green. Slightly less realistic but effective.
On Instagram I saw some great two colour zombies. I decided to try two individuals to see how they turned out. I was pretty happy and when I get back to painting the extra kickstarter zombies, I shall paint a few more like this.
Once I only had a few zombies left I realised that none of the zombies were particularly horrible. I decided to make a handful look like they had been feasted upon.
These two fellas were customised with spare parts from a Bolt Action unit. the miner's pick and the backpack make them stand out from the norm a little.
Finally I needed some ghosts for DnD so I came up with this ghost colour scheme using a green wash on white. Possibly the quickest painting process but it looks pretty effective.
Once the characters and zombies were complete I took an indefinite break from Zombicide and moved onto the huge host of other projects that I had piling up. They taught me a lot of different techniques and I feel that my skills progressed leaps and bounds.
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