Saturday, January 17, 2015

The Beast is alive! -- Dark Mechanicum Defiler finished.

See previous post for step-by-step painting guide and explanation of the color scheme.

 My photo box is too small for the Defiler. Therefore, I had to do pictures with indirect sun light. I apologize for the bad pictures! Also the ones I took in the photo box (in the end) are crap. They just give you a rough idea of how the Defiler looks like. Please let me know if you found out how to best make pictures of miniatures in metallic colors!









Painting the Beast -- A Chaos Defiler from the Dark Mechanicum

After magnetizing the defiler, it is now time to paint it! Since I play different legions of Chaos and want to us the Defiler in all of them, I decided to paint it not legion-specific but rather choose a color scheme that would match a well as possible to Black Legion, Death Guard and the others. So what could be more matching than the colors of the Demon Engines of the Dark Mechanicum, cold metal! My inspiration in this case comes from the Imperial Armour 13, more specific from the picture of the Decimator in that book.

From the fluff point of view, I would imagine that the Dark Mechanicum does not waste any time on painting their war machines! Instead you see the bare materials that the demon engines are made of. I could imagine that they do not just use boring steel but some special metal alloys that are more durable and hold the chaos energies better.  The picture of the Decimator matches this idea, with a metallic color that has some brown and dark blue sea flavors added... In addition, I wanted to add some golden metal for the trim and some glowing runes to emphasize the demonic nature of the Defiler... OK, enough of words, let's go!

1. After the black basecoat, I airbrushed Dark Sea Blue in an inhomogeneous pattern  all over the miniature

2. I airbrushed Tin Bitz all over again in a rather inhomogeneous way...


 3. I airbrushed Boltgun Metal such that I would barely touch the shadowy and downwards facing parts and in general try to leave some of the previous colors looking through.

 4. I used a normal brush to highlight "sunny" areas with boltgun metal.

 5. I used Glorius Gold for the trim.

6. I do a wash/glaze of Dark Sea Blue mixed with some Klear Gloss Varnish trying to give the metal a bluish shine, which does not have to be homogeneous.

7. A wash with Brown Ink in the corners and shadowy parts, and including the gold

8. A wash of thinned Bestial Brown only around the rivets and other structures where rust/dust would collect.

 9. A highlight of Boltgun Metal on some parts that are supposed to look as if made out of different (lighter Metal). See the picture for detals.

10. A wash with Devlan Mud and then Baddab Black mainly to deepen the shadows and take away the shinniness of some metal.

11. Some very careful lining of recesses between moving parts with Black Ink (as a proxy for oil).

12. Drybrushing/Highlighting with Boltgun Metal

 13. A mixture of Purple Ink and Ardcoat Varnish to simlulate grease and oil on the hydraulic parts



 14. Painting the runes with Blood Red (a little thicker than you actually have to with your best brush)

15. Putting the glow into the runes with Fiery Orange using the finest lines you manage.

16. Finishing the model (sorry no photos of this part anymore):
- I painted all cables simply in Chaos Black.
- There was a skull that I primed with brown, highlighted with Bleached Bone and then shaded with Devlan Mudd.
- The rockets in the Havoc Launcher got a red tip and the sensor in the launcher itself were also painted red.
- I added some blood (Tamiya Clear Red) to the claws and spikes, just a bit...
- I wanted a crackling lightning effect on the power scourge in blue. So I first drybrushed parts of it in white and the put craeful glazes osf Enchanted Blue. Finally I tried to draw some little lightnings with white again. However, I did not like the result and so carefully airbrushed some additional white onto the tip of the scourge before I applied again some glazes of Enchanted Blue trying to simulate an inner glow (i.e. more blue towards the edges). I am not completely happy with the result but it is OK.

The result...
... does not look like much because it is so difficult to make proper pictures of metal! Please believe me that it looks more interesting and less dull in reality.

Still, I am not 100 per cent happy with the result because the metal became to dominating, i.e. the blue and brown are not strong enough anymore. Therefore, people might just think that it is an Iron Warriors Defiler on first glance... Well, I will try to improve the color scheme on my next model...