Off the Top of My Head #3: How I Spent My Summer Vacation, Painting and the Balrog of Moria

Off The Top of My Head

I posted in my second “Off the Top of my Head” some of the 40k figures I painted.  While I started painting with the five “came with the paint set” marines, the second model I painted wasn’t a Black Reach Ork but a Games Workshop, Citadel Balrog of Moria.  I love the Lord of the Rings movies, but I don’t have much interest in the game (I like the grim darkness of the 41st millennium).  This model was given to me by a friend I work with.  His son loves the Lord of the Rings figures.  He found this particular to be a little too advanced for him and offered it to me as a thank you for locating some hard-to-find movies and toys online (he calls me “the finder of lost items”).  The weekend before my vacation I decided on a weapon for the Balrog, primered him, glued him and started painting him.

After painting it I decided, since I don’t collect the LOTR figures, I would return it to the young man who gave it to me.  He was very happy to get the completed Balrog back and I received the ultimate kid compliment for my work: I was invited over to view his collection of Lord of the Rings miniatures and play video games.  I take it as high praise!

Barlrog Full
My Balrog. Chaos Black primer, washed all over in old Baal Red, then the fire parts were painted white and washed in Casandora Yellow. I used some Troll Slayer Orange for the darker fire parts and washed it in Bloodletter Glaze
Balrog Right
Full Balrog from the right. The whip used the same technique as the fire, painted white then washed in yellow with orange details glazed in red.
Balrog Left
Balrog from the left.  My Horus Heresy and 40k books made a good backdrop.
Balrog Base 1
The base was the most fun to paint. I liked the detail of the skeleton in armor with an axe. I painted it Runelord Brass, Moonfang Brown, Bugman’s Glow, and Screaming Skull then washed the whole thing in Earthshade.
Balrog Base 2
Base of the Balrog showing the bony hand with axe.  I didn’t put the orange detail on the Balrog’s arms.  I probably should have but I was eager to get to that 40k army!
Balrog's Face
The face of the Balrog. His horns are drybrushed with Praxeti White.

Off the Top of My Head #2: How I Spent My Summer Vacation, Painting and Warhammer 40k

Off The Top of My Head

As I mentioned in a recent “artboard” post I’ve recently become interested in the intense, deep, gothic sci-fi table-top wargame and fantasy book series Warhammer 40k.  I love it.  The lore, the races, the strategy.  It’s everything I’m interested in all rolled into a compact expressive, creative package.

Admittedly I only became interested after playing the excellent Space Marine on PS3 (my favorite game of last year) and became more obsessed after I played through the Dawn of War series, read some Black Library books and an old 3rd edition rulebook from a local used book store.

Like Hans Gruber from Die Hard (maybe not the best role model…) I always enjoyed models as a kid but hated painting them.  All those tiny parts with horrible paint that never went on cleanly…  I just wanted to put my tank together.  Putting together Citadel miniatures has been a new experience.  Not only do I like putting them together but I actually enjoy painting them.  It requires a lot of focus, steady hands, and patience, which thankfully I do actually have (thanks to years of drawing and old-school gaming…)  Though I have a couple of battleforces in boxes ready to emerge onto the battlefield, I started with the easy-to-put-together miniatures that came with my starter paint set.

These guys were supposed to be Dark Angels but because I grew to love the Dawn of War Blood Ravens characters I decided to go with that paint scheme.  They aren’t finished (I haven’t put any wash on them and I plan to print off some chapter-specific insignia) but I thought I’d share my progress!

It’s my first time painting anything like this…definitely anything this small so there’s nothing but room for improvement but I’ve enjoyed it and I hope the future models will only get better.

Marine
This was the first guy I ever painted. I primered in Chaos Black, air brushed in Mephiston Red and layered from there!
Marine Back
The backpack.

The Dawn of War series also introduced me to the Orks and I love those guys.  Their gruff, simple demeanor.  Their remarkably descriptive slang.  Their ultimately unruly appearance and junkyard tech.  Gotta love orks.  Because I’ll mostly be playing with myself (hey, you in the back, stop laughing.  Care to share what you thought was so funny with the rest of the class?) to learn the rules and get used to the complicated ins-n-outs of the game I bought Assault on Black Reach at a local hobby store and started painting the Orks as well.  Not only are they a lot more details in their equipment and appearance than vanilla marines, but they also present a lot of variety and possibilities in painting.  I’ve only painted some of them so far, but I feel my abilities and techniques have improved from what I did with the Marines.  They are still very beginner but I’m happy with them so far!

Warboss1
I didn’t follow the model in the Black Reach book and went my own direction on a few aspects, like the checks on his orky belt buckle.
Boss Back!
The twin guns and boss pole on the back of the warboss. I used the new Citadel paints as well as a couple older ones. Then drowned them in Nuln Oil. I figure I’ll get the hang of shades by the time I get to my Zagstruk finecast…
Orks Mob
The start of my little Waaagh! The warboss, a couple of boyz (one wiff a big shoota) and a nob.  I decided to make them Goffs, not only for the color scheme but because I like the idea of a horde of infantry.
Deffkopta
The side of my first deffkopta. This one took some time and didn’t come out perfectly…but I was still pleased with my first vehicle effort.
Nob
A pic of my Nob (you again? I said stop laughing!) It was the first chain weapon I painted and I liked the messy splatter effect.
Boy with Chainsword
Drawing inspiration from the bigger ork, I painted this littler guy up to match him.
Ork Horde
My Waaagh! so far.

I hope you enjoyed my first painting attempts.  As I go on and get a little more experienced I plan to share more.  Once I get into live firefights I’ll be posting on those as well!. It’s been a fun, and fascinating entry into the 41st millennium so far!

Off the Page #2: The Weird World of Oz

Off the Page

There have been a number of projects with which I’ve been involved that haven’t really panned out.  Reasons for this vary, from simple lack of enthusiasm to too many similarities to other projects.  Most of the time I can take these ideas and wrap them into the creative concepts that will pan out, but this is one that kind of dead-ended.

The premise came from my friends and frequent creative collaborative partner, Brandon Combs who is now pretty busy with Glitz and Grime.  During one of our many editing/review sessions he brought up how twisted the Wizard of Oz story really is and how much fun a darker, psychotic version would be.  We planned to use his unconventional story-telling and my artwork to create a graphic novel using the base story and producing it.  Unfortunately right after we began developing the concept “Weird Oz” hit everywhere.  McFarlane Toys began to produce it’s own line, various comics, books, and TV shows started to riff on it, and we both decided we would like like we were the soft, backing iron on the blade instead of the cutting edge.  So we dropped it.  Fortunately I still have the artwork and with the new “Oz: The Great and Powerful” film coming out I thought it was a good time to share:

Dorothy
My Dorothy. I gave her “farm girl” weapons and Ruby Sneakers just to mix things up. I wanted her kind of hot-girl tough.
Tin man
This is my Tin Man. In this concept the Tin Man is made up of various armor parts that he finds and collects from enemies. His REAL body can be seen underneath sections of the armor and looks like iron bands. He would replace his “armor” sections during the story. Which sounds great but would create lots of problems if I had to draw this series for an extended run…  Oh and I. Hate. Chainmail.
Scare Crow
I called him “Scar Crow.” It was in the midst of this drawing that we decided to nix the project. He was going to look like a torture victim, with that beam permanently tied to his body.

Maybe someday I can finish concepts on these just for fun, but I hope they still show that the idea was a little cutting edge when we came up with it!

Off the Artboard #2: And They Shall Know No Fear…

2D or otherwise!

Anyone who has read my section in “About Us” knows I have of late gained a massive interest in Warhammer 40k.  Thereby giving me +100 to my “King Dork” abilities.

Honestly, I didn’t even know much about it until “Space Marine,” which was my favorite game from last year.  Purists might scoff at my console-game entry into this vast universe, but, to quote James Rolfe: “To be a fan of anything, you have to be exposed to it first.”  Since discovering the incredibly deep and detailed world of the far future, I have read several novels, collected many art books, played through the Dawn of War series, watched the fun Ultramarines movie, and even started my own army (pics of my first painting attempts coming soon!).

Though I began my knowledge with the Ultramarines and read books about both Space Wolves and Grey Knights, it’s the Librarian-Knowledge-Centric Blood Ravens from Dawn of War that appealed the most to me.

I utilized this overwhelming interest to exercise more of my recently acquired, albeit limited, Illustrator skills.  While I’m still in the “look what I can do with polygons” phase using only the limited tools that come with Illustrator (the preloaded color options, shapes, etc), and creating objects and/or figures that just stand there, I was impressed with how much could be done using just what was learned in a few Google-found tutorials.  This has been a fun exercise in making something I’m interested in to try and learn to operate Illustrator and make using all the tools and functions second nature.  It was also an exercise in mass-production as I started with the basic marine and used parts from that piece to create the others.  I also created two artboards of “stuff,” weapons, insignia, and symbology that could be used over and over in various places to prevent having to re-create anything.

How impressed I’ll be with these early efforts next year only time will tell, but for now I give you my 2D squad of cartoon-style Blood Ravens!

Tactical Marine
My first effort. Basic tactical marine all cartoon’d out.  I gave him a standard bolter and a couple of grenades.
Assault Marine
This one was a nice exercise in different equipment. Making that chainsword was a blast and the first part of the Blood Ravens’ motto can be seen on its blade.
Devastator marine
A heavy-support devastator marine with heavy bolter. This one proved tricky and needs the most correcting. I made him a veteran just to mix up the colors a bit.
Captain/Chapter Master Gabriel Angelos
Captain Angelos with the Godsplitter. Making the artificer parts of his armor were an immensely fun challenge. Also he’s the only one with a human face. He’s still a cartoon but mostly recognizable!
Davian Thule
The final piece of the squad, Davian Thule as a Venerable Dreadnought. This one was obviously the most difficult, I could borrow very little from the others. It was also the most fun to build! There’s some canonical text on his armor.  Davian Thule was my favorite character in the Dawn of War series.  I wanted to ensure his venerable dreadnought state got the respect it deserved.

These were fun creations and made for nice self-taught Illustrator tutorials.  They’re still 2D flat objects, but are pretty far from my first “magnifying glass” creation, even though they were created essentially using the same concepts.  Next I’m going to try some expressive orks and maybe more dynamic character art.  These were fun though and hopefully they’ll be enjoyed!

Byte Me Shirts Now Available!

Anyone who saw the first Off the Artboard post “Byte Me” from June 27 saw designs that originated as T-shirt concepts. After some excellent planning and research by the more clever half of RevPub, they are the first Revenant Publications product now available!

They can be found on RedBubble.com at the following links and all styles are available, so you can express your inner 70s, 80s, 90s, or 2000s nerd! Check ’em out, and as always, thanks for the support!

Tera Byte Me by tigressmuse
Tera Byte Me
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Mega Byte Me by tigressmuse
Mega Byte Me
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Kilo Byte Me by tigressmuse
Kilo Byte Me
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Giga Byte Me by tigressmuse
Giga Byte Me
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