With bonus Cadian Marbo! (at the bottom)
Step 1: Basecoat
Step 2: Charadon Granite
For the boots.
Step 3: Dheneb Stone
This is for all flesh and cloth.
Step 4: Skull White
Lightly drybrushed over both the cloth and the flesh.
Step 5: Calthan Brown
All actual armour plates were painted Calthan Brown.
Step 6: Kommando Khaki
This was edged on the Calthan Brown armour plates.
Step 7: Vermin Brown
This is for anything leather. Ignore the old paint pot, the color is still around, but renamed "Vermin Brown."
Step 8: Bronzed Flesh
This was lightly drybrushed over the leather parts. I used to do a mix of Bleached Bone and Vermin Brown, but I experimented with Bronzed Flesh instead and it worked out rather well.
Step 9: Mechrite Red
Mostly for the grenades.
Step 10: Fiery Orange
This is a drybrushed highlight over the Mechrite Red grenades.
Step 11: Gretchin Green
For canteens.
Step 12: Iyanden Darksun
This was drybrushed over the canteens, and used for the sergeant chevrons on the sleeve.
Step 13: Boltgun Metal
For all the metal bits.
Step 14: Shining Gold
Imperial Eagles and knife/bayonet hilts.
...ok, we've built up the model pretty bright, complete with highlights. Let's bring it down with washes. Washing after a highlight also works to soften harsh highlights and bring it all together.
Step 15: Badab Black
Washed over the boots and Boltgun Metal bits.
Step 16: Ogryn Flesh
Washed over the fleshy bits.
Step 17: Devlan Mud
This was washed over all the gold, cloth, armour, canteens, leather, and red grenades. Pretty much anything you haven't covered already with the previous two washes.
Step 18: Skull White
Shoulder insignias.
Now with the model basically done, I move on to the base. Since Guard is a horde army, I'm going for a very minimalist base. Urban streets.
Step 19: Charadon Granite
Basing the base.
Step 20: Fortress Grey
Drybrushed and stipled on the base (hard to see in the pic). Drybrush to get the natural texture out of the base, stiple when you need more.
Step 21: Iyanden Darksun
Street paint. Crosswalks, lane divides, etc.
Step 22: Devlan Mud
Now mud it up.
It's a relatively low number of steps, which suits me fine given how many guardsmen I have in my future ;P
I never was a fan of the traditional Cadian scheme of olive green on khaki (especially since I already collect Dark Angels, which is a very similar scheme). The scheme I chose was actually inspired by the game Dawn of War: Winter Assault. The 180th Cadians were this cool brown color-scheme, but the cloth was dark and the plates were light. I tweaked with the painter to lighten up the cloth and darken the plates and thought it looked awesome. And here we are, my 221st Cadian regiment.
...as promised, Marbo:
There's an Ork Tankbusta bomb on the base, to represent his demolitions charge. Marbo was painted using the same techniques as above with a couple additions. The green on his bowie knife (off of a Marine sprue) is Scorpion Green.
To represent his unique pistol, I latched onto the 'Sniper' rule that came with it. The above pistol is a chopped up sniper rifle.
The wound on his arm was a small drop of Baal Red wash on the bandage. The overloaded backpack came from the Heavy Weapons Team sprue. Marbo is prepared for anything.
Cracking tutorial mate, and I'm loving that marbo!
ReplyDeleteIf 22 is a relatively low number of steps I shudder to think of what a lot would be...
ReplyDeleteRelative to my other 'step-by-step' tutorials. They usually run into the high 30's.
ReplyDelete@Col. Corbane: :)
This is a great color scheme. I also use Dheneb Stone for my uniforms, and Charadon Granite for armor, so am thinking I can use this tutorial to improve the way I paint my IG. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThe Iyanden Darksun on Gretchin Green makes for an interesting look. I probably won't change the way I do canteens, but I may have to try this on something just cause I like how it looks.
Oh, and Marbo's pistol, great idea that one.
Nice tutorial and cadians. My cadians, I followed more of the current troops colour scheme, with bleach bone camo uniform and green camo armour. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteExcellent walkthru, it really gives me some insight I can apply to my own painting.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
I like the easy way to dress up the bases that you used. I may be stealing that idea.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if I mentioned it before, but your Step By Step posts are one of the greatest things on the interwebs. Clean, consise and delivers.
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff.
Loving the guard. How many do you have done at this point? And the Marbo? Sexy!
Thanks for all the high praise!
ReplyDelete@Cawshis Clay: :) What do I have so far? Let me break this down:
Painted
10-man Infantry squad
Marbo
Primaris Psyker
Regimental commander w/ Powerfist
Command squad guardsman
guardsman w/ voxcaster
guardsman w/ meltagun
Assembled and ready to paint
Commissar Lord
2 Platoon Commanders
2 command squads
Boxed and unassembled
2 infantry squads
6 Heavy Weapons Teams
Sentinel
Hellhound
I really only started a guard army after the codex, mixing them into my rotating schedule for all my armies. It's still in its "fledgling" state.
excellent tutorial, very simple and easy to follow yet effective, one of the few guard ones out there which leaves you with such a solid looking result. ill be sure to keep checking up on your progress. thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, I have been looking for ages for something different and had to give this a go with the current paints. I went too heavy on wash though!
ReplyDelete