On the workbench today are some Tau Fire Warriors I've been meaning to get done for a long time. A while back I had decided, due to my hatred of orange as a main color, to go with the Bork'an Sept described in the Codex. I liked the fluff, I liked the colors, all was well with the world. Fast forward to painting my first fire warrior, and lo - the Codex lied to me! They showed me a cool off-white armor with teal sept markings, and told me that the color scheme was Space Wolves Grey and Hawk Turquoise. Well, what you see above is Space Wolves Gray and Hawk Turquoise, and it's NOT the scheme pictured in the book. Theirs is much closer to white.
Regardless, I ended up liking my scheme better, and have stuck with it. ;)
On to the step-by-step:
Step 1: Black Primer
Step 2: Basecoat of Astronomican Grey
The cloth will end up darker than the armour, and we're going to achieve it with a two step process...
Step 3: Badab Black Wash (heavy)
Lookin' good. Next up, the skin.
Step 4: Dheneb Stone basecoat
I fiddled around with a few different schemes to get a good blue flesh, and the one I ended up settling on had this cream color as a base. You end up with a cool effect that I thought looked very real and organic.
Step 5: Asurmen Blue wash
See what I mean? I tried this with a base of grey or even white instead of the cream, and it looked ... bland. I don't know, there's something about the two-tone look here that makes him look more alive.
On to the armour...
Step 6: Space Wolves Grey basecoat
I don't know about your experiences with this paint colour, but for me, this is almost eligible for Foundation Paint status in how well it goes down. What you see above is ONE COAT ... on BLACK. It goes down well, is what I'm saying.
Step 7: Hawk Turquoise
The model I'm using is a Shas'ui (equivalent of a Sergeant, for anyone not fluent in Tau), so his shoulder guard is getting a section of the sept colour, as well as the squad markings.
Step 8: Skull White highlight
The Tau are the only army I'm currently collecting that I'm actually ok with an armour finish that doesn't have a wash. The high-contrast look comes off very clean and sharp, and that's an effect that I think suits the Tau very well.
In addition to edging the armour, You'll notice I've gotten the white in the Empire badge on his shoulder guard. The areas that will be black are embossed, so don't worry if it looks sloppy at this stage...
Step 9: Chaos Black
Here's where you carefully hit the raised areas on the Empire badge, making sure the black doesn't get into the crevices where the white is.
Step 10: 1:1 mix of Skull White : Hawk Turquoise
This is a highlight for the armour edge on the shoulder guard panel painted Hawk Turquoise.
Step 11: Skull White Base Coat
I want my Shas'ui team leader to be a veteran, and thus I've decided I want his hair grey.
Step 12: Badab Black wash
Nice and old.
Step 13: Boltgun Metal
This is going on the grenades, bits of the backpack, gun's sight, hand-rest and barrel tips, and the drone controller.
Step 14: Gryphonne Sepia wash
This is for the grenades and the drone controller. It gives an interesting and alien metallic effect that I like.
Step 15: Shining Gold
For the thing at the end of the Pulse Rifle (do you know what it is? Does anybody? I'm pretty sure the Tau don't even know what that dongle-thing is).
Step 16: Blood Red
This is a 4-step process that I use for gems, lenses, etc. You can use this for any color scheme. On the Tau, I use red to contrast with their cool colors, and this is being applied to the gun scope lense, a panel on the backpack that I use as an energy level readout, and the helmet lenses. While I'm starting with Blood Red, if you want another color, the first step is the mid-tone color.
Step 17: Scab Red
Next up in this effect is a darker version of the first color. For red, it's Scab Red. You apply this to the side of the object that is facing the lightsource (generally at the top).
Step 18: Fiery Orange
This step is the bright highlight of the base color. For red, I've chosen Fiery Orange. You apply this to the opposite side of the object as the dark color (away from the light source).
Step 19: Skull White
The last step is a spot of white where the light is actually hitting the object (in the middle of the dark area). This is the reflection spot off of a semi-transparent surface. The light that enters the object then reflects off of the inside opposite surface. This is why it is brighter in shade on the opposite side of the object from where the light hits.
Step 20: Jade Green (Snot)
I have an old bottle of Jade Green that is no longer in production. A good current equivalent is Snot Green.
Step 21: Dark Angels Green
I want his drone controller screen to be dark with a halo of green, which is why I've only applied the DA green to the center.
Step 22: Putrid Green (Scorpion)
This is another out of production colour. They've renamed it Scorpion Green. All I've done here is draw a glyph and a few dots on the screen to make it look like a "screen" and not a gem/lens.
Step 23: Scab Red
We're working on the bonding knife here, and I want a deep red and gold effect with the sept color on the hilt's ribbon.
Step 24: Bestial Brown
This is for the handle (in between the ribbon).
Step 25: Shining Gold
The hilt, pommel, and sheath studs are all in gold.
Step 26: Hawk Turquoise
For the ribbon.
Step 27: Badab Black wash
Bringing some depth to the bonding knife.
The model is done now, on to the base. For the Bork'an Tau, I've gone with a snow theme to fit their armour.
Step 28: Skull White
When we put the snow down, without this basecoat, it will look like sludge. Seriously.
Step 29: Gravel
I've glued down some rocks to break up the terrain a bit.
Step 30: Devlan Mud wash
Not only for the gravel, but I've put it on the white where I want the grass to be.
Step 31: Static Grass
Glued down around the rocks
Step 32: Snow
It's a cool flaky powder ... but just glued down, it looks like he's standing in a pile of Sweet n' Low. The best way to alleviate that is...
Step 33: Watered down PVA glue
Put this over the snow, and it will flatten it out a bit, yet still keep that snowy sheen.
Awesome, now to do the same to the rest!
Let me know what you guys think. Was this useful? Do you have any simple methods for similar effects?
the picture of the model progressing standing next to the paint worked well. very nice.
ReplyDeleteYou gave me a few ideas, very useful post! I'll go with a very battle-hardened cadre though with bullet holes, dirt and else everywhere :)
ReplyDeleteWell they won't be this clean to say the least ;)
While I don't play Tau, I was impressed with the quality of this tutorial. I like how you did the step by step, using the paint pots and focusing on where the paint was applied.
ReplyDeleteThis is about the simplest basing technique I've seen. I like simple.
Nice looking armor scheme too. I like the way this turned out. I'd stick with it too. ;)
Helluva tutorial. well done!
ReplyDeleteYes, that's an excellent tutorial. I am a Blood Angels player, but you make me want to paint a Tau Warrior just for the experience. =)
ReplyDeleteAwesome step by step tutorial mate! Very clear and well explained.
ReplyDeleteI really like the painting tutorial / step by step, but i'm not big on the bases. I think it's that the photos don't really show that it's snow (it's very difficult to make out)
ReplyDeleteAny chance of a closeup of the base?
Just adding to the choir. Really nice tutorial and I honestly want a Tau army after reading this. I really like the color scheme. Well done!
ReplyDeleteHoly shit ... those ancient citadel bottles kicked ass didn't they ... why oh why did they ever change!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the positive feedback, guys! :)
ReplyDelete@Parcival: if the rumors are true, I'll be encroaching on BA territory soon ... so you may see them pop up in the step-by-steps as well ;)
@Blaise: All of the pictures are clickable to get a full-size shot. Other than that, I can't get it any larger. My little digi camera was at max zoom, plus any closer and it won't focus. =/
Check the in progress pics before and after the watered down glue. If you feel the finished product doesn't show the snow as much, you might like the pre-flattened snow. If not, I'll see what I can do about getting some better pictures... possibly snow basing a small piece of terrain.
@Flekkzo: Bwahaha, my plan is working ;P
Wow, very nice. Great tutorial.
ReplyDeleteAs for Space Wolves Grey: it's one of my primary colors on my tau (next to Blazing Orange) and I need 4 layers of SWG to get a decent coverage...
Lovely Tau fire warriors, great finish! (Makes my lot look a bit half baked ... but oh well!?!)
ReplyDeleteI like the extra 'details' like the power readout. Very nice.
Another great tutorial! Thank you for all the effort you put into the blog and the mini!
ReplyDeleteAh yes, this reminds me of my old Bor'Kan army. Alas, I sold it and ever since I have only played against half-hearted armies with poor paint jobs. Thank you for bringing a little bit of badass back to this old shas'la's soul.
ReplyDeleteWoah! These are great! Nice job.
ReplyDeletethose fire warriors look fantastic, make me want to play Tau again (I sold my army after playing one game in 4th ed as hardly anyone played anymore), but now have new opponents and a slowly growing eldar army but I will always have a soft spot for the blueskins.
ReplyDeleteI liked the step by step guide as well, very helpful for new painters and vets alike.
my tau colour scheme (before I sold them) was black cloth, purple armour and bone weapons and helmets. The squad leaders had a beige coloured band on their shoulder pad, while the normal guys just had purple pads. Worked quite well, and your guys make me wanna paint tau again! Dammit I can feel my wallet getting lighter already!
ReplyDelete@Anon: That sounds like a really cool color scheme. You got pics?
ReplyDeleteAwesome work! I've been having difficulty figuring out what I wanted to do for my tau scheme (Doing the same as you, collecting every army), and this looks great! Definitely a thumbs up from me.
ReplyDeleteFantastic paint job and an excellent tutorial. I had made the same choice as you but just went with pure white.... boring. learned my mistake and I'm now going with your scheme. Thanks for the tips.
ReplyDeleteOn the devilfish step by step you did all astronomic grey for the undercoat because black doesnt work with the space wolves grey... is astronomic grey best for undercoat here too??
ReplyDeleteYes. I did these guys back when I had an unusually thick pot of SW Grey. If your SW grey is too thin to go on black in one coat, use the Astronomican Grey as a base.
ReplyDeleteAre you going to be doing a crisis suit step by step?
ReplyDeleteso could i do a black primer with a grey undercoat and then the space wolves grey? or would that not work?
ReplyDeleteThat would work, yes. Black primer, then grey undercoat, then SW grey.
ReplyDelete