I then painted only the most evident muscles, leaving the black in the lower part of the arms, in the inlets or near the armor, thus doing the work that usually does the shade in the classic painting style “base color, shade, highlight” which we had seen for Zombicide for example (LINK TO ZOMBICIDE JOHANNES). Here the goal is not to paint our ogre’s skin uniformly, but to create a base for the areas of light. Let’s start with the skin with a dark green of Vallejo, the same used for the Deathwing of the Dark Angels, and a brush of those that Da Vinci Brushes gave me but that I had not yet had the opportunity to use. Maybe what I used wasn’t that subtle, I wanted to make them less obvious, even more subtle. Not happy though, I wanted to emphasize some edges and simulate some scratches and dents on the armor, drawing them by hand with a very thin brush. For this reason I try to brush in the opposite direction to the edges and edges, in order to make them stand out. Only at this point did I switch to the clearer Mail Plate Metal, to emphasize above all the more external parts exposed to light, in order to make it reflect. Clearly, all the armor must be brushed, from the large shoulder straps, to the chest and leggings. I then started using the brush at the same time, smudging it with the first two darker colors, to give a unique background base. It is therefore useless to waste time with other details. Starting with the dry brush is recommended because it is the technique that tends to dirty the miniature the most, as can be easily understood. Three very different colors, but which if used well can give different metallic shades to the armor, unlike the use of a single shade of silver. I started right from the dry brush, using 3 metallic colors of The Army Painter coming mostly from the metallic colours paint set: Night Scales, Rough Iron and Plate Mail Metal together with the Masterclass Moderate Dry brysh. No Zenithal highlight this time then, because I need a black background to be used both for the shadows of the muscles, and as a base for the dry brush on the armor. How to paint Black Orcs from Blood Bowl: the primerįor this miniature, I chose a unique black background that I airbrushed, using Vallejo 73.602, which has a VERY opaque rendering. We will also see how to give a reflective and metallic effect to the armor, all in a fairly simple way to achieve. In this article, we will see how to paint a Black Orc therefore, going to use the highlights a lot and the shaders very little. I love the not serious and very funny style of its setting and its characters. They look really aggressive! As you know, I’m not much of a player but it’s always a pleasure to deal with Blood Bowl miniatures. This team is made up of aggressive orcs equipped with worn iron armor and thick leather fabrics, straps and masks with horns attached to their jaws.
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