Showing posts with label Lost Mine of Phandelver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lost Mine of Phandelver. Show all posts

Thursday, January 02, 2025

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Ogre

 



This was a fun model to paint - I had to resist doing more but I kept the basic schema of airbrush and pick out some details for these Lost Mine 3D printed minis. This is the ogre model and I believe he's only used as a random encounter outside of Phandelver.

I airbrushed a black primer and then used Reaper's Suntan Flesh through the airbrush on the entire model. I did use just a couple drops of Vallejo thinner and a couple drops of Vallejo flow improver which was a first as I've previously been using Vallejo's airbrush paints previously so this was my first time shooting Reaper paint. I decided to stay with the Reaper paint picking Ruddy Brown and Rich Leather as my only browns. I used Nightsky Blue on the giant rock of a club. Crimson Red for the hair and Dirty Grey for the loincloth. Yellowed Bone for all bone items and Dragon Black on the base. Then called it Done!

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - the sculpt is well done with good detail and just a fun piece.

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent- big ogre going to smash little humans.

Monday, December 30, 2024

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Sildar Hallwinter

 



This model was an interesting choice for Sildar Hallwinter - definitely an older warrior which is good - it has a medieval europe meets asia flair which is a bit different - the double swords is out of character for the module as written but could work. 

I was quite pleased with how this paint scheme turned out for the minimalist style I'm using on these figures for LMoP.  Besides the tan skin tone - there are only two tones of brown - one dark the other light. The grey is used in the hair, beard, and pants. The blue in the pants and hair wrap. Black base like the others. 

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - the sculpt is well done with good detail.

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Good - like the older man look - not a fan of the some of the other pieces to fit the storyline.


Thursday, December 12, 2024

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Goblins

 


A goblin war band for the first scenario in the Lost Mine of Phandelver or the latest update of the adventure as written in Phandelver and Below: The Shattered Obelisk.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase. I should have painted these first but when I originally purchased the set we were already past the first set of encounters, but now I'm running a new group through and this warband with a few of the town characters need painting.

Once again the style for this set is Wizkids pre-painted simplicity with some flair. With that these were first airbrushed with Vallejo Goblin Green and then various bits picked out. I took care of all leather and body armor bits including the giant protruding spikes in Leather Brown. All metal bits were done in Dark Gunmetal. From there each goblin was given different color hair and clothes to make them look unique and not a military warband unlike hobgoblins who are very militaristic in their background lore. Finally all the bases were painted black.

Sculpt: Excellent - these models have a great look to them - I'm not a big fan of all the spikey bit coming from the armor and I toned that down by painting them all the same color.

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent - has the proper base and scale, and will look good on the tabletop.


Saturday, February 17, 2024

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Orcs

 


This is the hollywood version of orcs - or maybe the World of Warcraft pretty boys/gals of the orc kingdoms. I prefer my orcs a bit old school, ugly, and nasty. However, if you're looking for fantastic looking barbarians with tusks then these will be calling out to you.

I did these a little bit different where I first did an airbrush undercoat of black, then I hit these with the a blue-grey from the 12:00 position. Next I gave the Vallejo Xpress Colors a go using Velvet Red, Copper Brown, Plague Green, Templar White, and Dwarf Skin a go.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - these models have a super dynamic look to them and if you're into new age orcs you'll love them!

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent - has the proper base and scale, and will look good on the tabletop. One note, the champion orc (back right on the picture) is a bit wide in stance and came with a 32mm base instead of 25mm or 1".


Monday, January 29, 2024

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Hobgoblins

 








Love the sculpt of these Hobgoblins - a little old school but with a modern flair and a bit of uniqueness to the models. Between these and the skeletons, I think they're my favorite sculpts from this set from 3D Dungeon Labs and their Phandelver bundle. The design language I'm going for is simplistic and clean and I think this is one of my best paint jobs for this look.

I started these with the airbrush and did a base coat in Terracotta. Then picked out the details using Vallejo's new Abyssal Turquoise along with Sombre Grey, Dark Fleshtone, Leather Brown, Gunmetal and perhaps my new favorite color Charcoal.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - these models have a super dynamic look to them and as noted a bit old school - love em!

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent - has the proper base and scale, and will look good on the tabletop.


Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Owlbear

 



Back to the standard Vallejo Game Color paint for this model. This is a fantastic sculpt and 3d print - lots of fun to paint. I have some new drybrushes by Golden Maple (Amazon) - it's a 6 piece drybrush set and they're round and soft like makeup brushes. Get them wet, mostly dry them off, then drybrush like normal and they work really well without leaving that dusty/chalky nonsense. Additionally they appear to handle the drybrushing technique without destroying bristles like what happens with a standard brush.

I used the same painting directions that were used for the Wizkids Owlbear.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - these model has a great dynamic look to it.

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent - has the proper base and scale, and will look good on the tabletop.


Monday, December 25, 2023

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Redbrands

 






These were awesome 3d prints for the Redbrand gang and I had a good time detailing these out from a basecoat of airbrushing Scarlet Red on all the models (which went down very well). All paints were Vallejo and after using the airbrush I brought these six models onto the hobby desk to pick out the details. Tan for the flesh followed by Terracotta for the leather armor. Next was Leather Brown on the bags, Bestial Brown on the hair/beards and Gunmetal on the swords. The Redbrand Gang leader, I did a little more by using Wolf Grey to give him candy cane stripes on his pants.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - these were fun sculpts to airbrush with lots of dynamic flowing robes/cloaks and as a group will look great on the tabletop.

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid.

Fitness: Excellent - has the proper base and scale, and will look good as a unit on the tabletop.

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Giant Bugbears

 




I mentioned on the freebie miniature post where I delved into my first attempt at using contrast paints with Vallejo Xpress Color that I ordered some additional miniatures and had received that one as a freebie. The other items in that package which I hadn't shared until now are these super awesome giant bugbears. I had contacted Jonathan at 3DDungeon Labs on Etsy and asked him if he could scale up those bugbears to be 2x original size - as if they were magically enlarged. He set off to it and a bit later shipped me these freakin' amazing models.

I replicated exactly the paint process that I did for the original bugbears. These models are being used as an extension of the Phandelver starter set. Towards the end, there's a certain wizard that uses bugbears as henchmen and he escaped. He has come back to nag the party doing the Indiana Jones thing, when they make a discovery he's more powerful and takes the artifact away - totally pissing off the party, brahahaha!

What the bugbears do is enlarge and become more than what the party can handle at the moment. The first time the models were on the table in the "standard" size and the party was like "no problem, we can take 'em", - then they doubled in size and I swapped in the new large ones, lmao!

On another note, if anyone wants to know why the rules say "The target's size doubles in all dimensions, and its weight is multiplied by eight.", just come over here and give these bad boys a lift (it's 2^3=8x).


Saturday, August 05, 2023

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Freebie & Contrast Paints

 


I ordered some additional miniatures from 3D Dungeon Labs and besides the two extra giant spiders they also sent me a freebie miniature of this wood fey/sprite or pan creature.  It was the perfect opportunity to utilize some new contrast paints which I'd picked up from the local hobby store. I previously had picked up four of Vallejo's "contrast" paints they call Xpress Color.  I believe Games Workshop was the originator of the contrast paint type a few years back.  I had some friends tinker with the stuff creating a WH40k army or parts of one but none of them stayed with the paint line.

There were only 4 colors of the Vallejo Xpress Color in stock and the local hobby store said they had a difficult time keeping stock because they'd sell out almost immediately. I was able to pick up a brown, grey, green, and blue.  That's enough basic colors to do something with.  Well that something came about with this model.

I remember reading that these types of paints work best on a white or grey primer.  I still had an old can of white primer and therefore shot this model up with it.  Then I went to town on the model with the Vallejo Xpress Color.

First up was the green and using this paint I did what I'd normally do - load up the brush and start inside out - meaning I'd start on the face first and work my way out.  Normally this is good because you can be a bit "messy" and then "clean" by painting over any messes as you work towards the outer part of the model.

I made two mistakes immediately.  I put too much paint on the brush and hence the face and the upper body received too much green paint and I slobbered on other areas of the model which become issues later on.  The Xpress Color is a bit if an ink and paint had a baby but it really acts more like an ink.  The paint works with very little on the brush on top of a white foundation.  It's very transparent and pools into the recesses like an ink.  This thick and thin of the paint give it its contrast - where it pools has a darker color than the flat of a model.  I noticed also that as it dries, it stretches the paint pulling the paint towards the ends and thinning out the middle.

Mistake 1 - you'll notice that the face is too dark compared to the body - I slobbered too much on the face and so the paint didn't have the ability to pull into recess and pull towards the end.  The solution is to use very little of the paint over a solid white primer.  

Mistake 2 - I'm used to slobbering paint initially and then cleaning up that slobber with another color.  This is displayed in the hair of the model and the sash across the back.  I initially did some brush strokes slobbering on the green and quickly realized how fluid this paint actually was and how little I needed to use and that because of the translucent effect the paint needed over white primer that this was going to cause a problem.  The solution and understanding is that this is a very technical paint and black lines generate where paint overlaps - which is a very cool effect because essentially it does the black lining for you!  This effect is noticeable on the front of the model where the brown meets the green or the blue of the sash has a black line between it and the green of the body or the brown of the pan flute.  You can also see on the back of the model where the green was slobbered all over the sash and the blue on top just turns into big splotches of black.  Therefore the trick is to stay "within the lines" and have a slight overlap between two colors to generate a thin black line for higher contrast.

Once the green was done and I started to learn some lessons, I then pulled out the brown and did up all the wood on the creature - the legs, hands, shoulder pads, and antlers.  I made sure to use only a little bit of the paint at a time and being very careful technically to only put paint on the right parts.  I found myself dabbing and spreading more than actually painting.

Next came the blue which I used on the sash and the shoulder pad decorations.  And finally I used the grey on the hooves, 

Some thoughts...

* the paint over a solid and smooth white primer is going to generate a very dynamic model

* very little paint goes a long way

* keep washing the brush, dry it into a point with a twirl, then dab into the paint - do this often but do not leave water on the brush as normal

* the contrast is between crevice and flat - not as the sun shines which we've been taught as mini-painters to do for the past two decades

* the brightness and shading of the sun can be accomplished by moving the paint around or placing a second layer - so for example, I placed more brown at the bottom side of the antlers once I figured out how the paint worked

* the grey was too translucent - it needed two coats

* it's a fast way of painting - this entire model took an hour and I probably could have done it in less time as I was learning the paint

* it's a very technical paint - you can't be sloppy and you can't change your mind unless you repaint a section white

* there's no blending or layering - it's a very different thought process 

* I would not teach a beginner using this paint - however an intermediate painter can use this paint to quickly paint highly dynamic models

Overall it's an interesting paint line - I'm going to keep dabbling with it and probably pick up some more colors within the paint line.

Friday, August 04, 2023

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Giant Spider 2

 




More spider love!  I painted these the opposite of the first group of giant spiders for the Lost Mine.  I ordered some additional miniatures from 3D Dungeon Labs and mentioned that when you play the end sequence of Lost Mines you really need four of these giant spiders - so Jonathan sent me another two spiders with my new miniatures.  These look fantastic as a set - 2 blues and 2 reds.


Saturday, June 10, 2023

Lost Mine of Phandelver - Cultists




Oh these were great fun to paint with the airbrush and simple as well.  I did these two different ways - one group of three was Black to Sombre Grey while the other was a Black to a Stormy Blue.  Each model was sprayed a base coat, then from about a 2:00 position a lighter color and then from the 12:00 position the lightest.  The interesting bit about the airbrush is that the spray has a dithering effect - essentially it's spraying fine dots of paint.  When I look at the model in my hand I can't see the dithering, but when I take a picture of it in high res at 2x or 3x the size the dithering is obvious.  I used a wash to blend in the three layers of sprayed paint.

The washes were a Black Wash and a Blue Wash respectively.  Following that I put together about a 60/40 mix of Sombre Grey with Dead Flesh to paint the face - the idea is I wanted to keep a very subdued/shadowy look to this group.  Finally, I wanted one item of important to each model highlighted - the book with some writing, the dagger, or the flaming skull - which was painted with Goblin Green, Escorpena Green, and Livery Green.  On that model I tried my first attempt at object source lighting (OSL) - whereby the green flames on the skull reflected back on the model as a light source.

This is part of the 3D Dungeon Labs Etsy shop purchase.

Sculpt: Excellent - these were fun sculpts to airbrush with lots of dynamic flowing robes/cloaks and as a group will look great on the tabletop

3D Print: Excellent - well done - clean - no issues anywhere - very solid

Fitness: Good - has the proper base and scale, and while these models make good generic cultists, they're not really dragon cultists - dragon cultists are famous for their dragon masks.