Looking for some tips or guides to painting the tauntauns. Traditional Hoth style.
I could experiment but I prefer to get some ideas from what has worked for others first and then make adjustments from there.
Edited by Proton TorpedoLooking for some tips or guides to painting the tauntauns. Traditional Hoth style.
I could experiment but I prefer to get some ideas from what has worked for others first and then make adjustments from there.
Edited by Proton Torpedo
I went straight ESB canon for all 3 of my Tauntaun units, and I'm happy to talk you through the process
First, I assembled the Tauntauns, (sans riders, which were painted separately,) and gave them a standard zenithal undershade prime with an airbrush.
Then, it's a matter of repeating the following pattern until you're satisfied with the depth: drybrush the fur with a light grey approaching white; selectively apply grey shade to fur; drybrush the fur; selectively apply shade to fur... (I ended up doing this about 7 or 8 cycles.)
For the fleshy parts (the face, inside of the ears, etc.) I checked a lot of references - and the movie models were much more grey than pink. But they're all a mixture of your midtone grey, and fleshtone, so just experiment with what you have. Then shade/highlight the face until you're satisfied with the depth.
Nails/claws/horns were all done with a bone base color (Ushabti from GW, Bone White from VGC,) and various levels of Sepia ink shading.
Leather - there are a number of leather layers stacked on top of one another, so it's challenging to vary those layers enough to tell them apart - but it's important, because the saddle area can end up looking like an indistinct pile of brown.
Riders: The base colors were grey/brown pants; brown leather boots with off-white straps; midtone brown vest; off-white shirts; midtone brown/off-white hats. But I changed up scarfs and details of the uniforms so that I could tell the units apart on the table. I also based them all differently.
Hope this helps! Let me know if there's anything else I can do to walk you through it.
Have fun! They'll change your Legion life forever
On 1/15/2020 at 4:45 PM, OuterPop said:Then, it's a matter of repeating the following pattern until you're satisfied with the depth: drybrush the fur with a light grey approaching white; selectively apply grey shade to fur; drybrush the fur; selectively apply shade to fur... (I ended up doing this about 7 or 8 cycles.)
This is tremendously helpful. Thank you very much!
Just one follow-up question: when you say selectively apply grey shade, what are you referring to? Some kind of wash?
Again, thank you so much for explaining your technique. I know I'm not the only one who will benefit.
This is the stuff. The most irreplaceable bottle in my collection:
Although, any dark shade product like Nuln Oil or Dark Tone would do the trick.
To see this technique in its best light, take a look at the wonderful Vince Venturella, as he walks you through it step by step.
On 1/18/2020 at 3:49 AM, OuterPop said:This is the stuff. The most irreplaceable bottle in my collection:
Although, any dark shade product like Nuln Oil or Dark Tone would do the trick.
To see this technique in its best light, take a look at the wonderful Vince Venturella, as he walks you through it step by step.
Thanks to your help, I was able to paint my Tauntauns. I don't think they look as good as yours, but they look good to me.
Tauntauns to the Rescue https://imgur.com/gallery/pTWXvKC
Final results. Thanks again!
These are absolutely stunning!!!
I'm so incredibly flattered to have assisted in any way in their creation. They are magnificent!