After finishing the rats monster truck and the Dreadtober challenge I needed to clean my pallet and just do something quick and dirty. This meant bringing out the smurfs. I do not know why they have become my go to army for cleansing. I guess it is because the paint scheme is really really easy and all the figures are from the starter kits so they are either pushfit our monopose, so there really is no option to modify them , just build as is and paint. As such I am not expecting anything great from them. This time around I played abit with the way I paint them. I still start out with a black base coat and drybrush cupper and white metals until I have a nice zenital highlight and somewhat smooth blends from dark to light. Then I used two shades of blue instead of one when washing them. Previously I have been using either Kantor blue or Altdorf guard blue. The later gives a bit of a lighter blue shade while the former is darker. I have by mistake used both versions on my normal troops, so they have slightly different shades. But not as different as one might think by looking at the colours. Any way, this time I decided (inspired buy the way I did the Obliteratos), to use the the lighter blue towards the top of the surfaces and the darker at the bottom, giving a more pronounced shading effect. I think it worked out great and this is probably how I need to do it with this technique on larger models. I will also try this on some troops later to see if it improves how they look.
I did however mess up the freehand on these and since the base colours are layered up I cant repaint with out restarting the whole model. I really need to get a new brush, the Dreadtober challenge and painting with dried up paints really messed it up. But from some distance they are ok. I don't know why I do not use transfers, but I guess it is some though about getting better at this free hand stuff.
Yeah, doing something fast and familiar is a great way to reset. These look great, I like the two blue tones!
SvaraRadera