Why Don't You Just Start?

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  • Опубліковано 18 тра 2017
  • Uncle Atom goes on a little bit of a tear (sorry) and tells you why you need to start NOW when it comes to your hobby. Turn off your TV!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 733

  • @samsendell
    @samsendell 7 років тому +533

    i love my tv and video games but still find time for wargamming! just got rid of that rubbish hobby called sleep.

    • @sheerjasper
      @sheerjasper 7 років тому +7

      Samuel John Sendell same! so much more time

    • @AaronFruman
      @AaronFruman 7 років тому

      Still practicing this.

    • @evilwev
      @evilwev 7 років тому +6

      Sleep is healthy fool.

    • @thisitemneedsadebuff7517
      @thisitemneedsadebuff7517 7 років тому +30

      Optimus Wev ruining the joke is not healthy fool

    • @drewwilliams1990
      @drewwilliams1990 7 років тому +4

      there is another option for those who are cash rich and time poor. there are now so many excellent painting houses out there who will build and paint figures for you, so many scenery companies out there offer stuff playable out of the box. don't get me wrong the hobby aspect is one of the most enjoyable aspects of the wider hobby in my opinion but with a long commute and a young family I can appreciate avenues which help get people to the table.

  • @a-blivvy-yus
    @a-blivvy-yus 7 років тому +223

    This video reminded me of one of the greatest moments I've seen in a gaming store. Not quite the exact line used in this video, but similar, happened in the Games Workshop store I used to visit. The store had a "no unpainted minis" policy on their gaming tables, and a guy showed up with some models he'd only just bought and assembled the day before.
    His line was "I haven't had time yet", which is a little better than the usual complaint quoted here.
    The store manager, who happened to be working on his own army (which he also planned to use as display models in the store window), called out from one of the store's pair of painting table.
    "You have time now, right? You can use my paints, and I'll help you out if you have questions" what he *didn't* mention was that he had pictures of some of his own minis in at least one codex and the latest 2 issues of the White Dwarf magazine that were sitting on the shelf behind him. I had been working on my second WH40K army on the other painting table at the time, and the advice that came up was directly relevant to the models I was painting, so I joined them too. From there we ended up with everyone crowding around and talking about painting techniques and forgetting they had been about to start actually playing...

    • @lucasnixan7695
      @lucasnixan7695 4 роки тому +7

      That is a interesting story

    • @joshual6305
      @joshual6305 4 роки тому +8

      I'm surprised they had a no unpainted models policy. Games workshop (and all model selling stores) primary goal is to sell as many models as possible.
      A painted model policy is a direct hinderance to this.

    • @alejandrorivas4585
      @alejandrorivas4585 4 роки тому +12

      @@joshual6305 there's a reason why Games Workshop has a lot of critics. They don't always make the best decisions. I'm lucky that my local GW has a much looser policy. The manager allows unpainted models, but will prod you to "at least prime them" one week. Then maybe next week he'll poke you and say, "why don't we sit down and base paint them, at least the armor?" So on and so forth until whaddya know, mr unpainted models has a decent looking army!

    • @leadpaintchips9461
      @leadpaintchips9461 4 роки тому +9

      @@alejandrorivas4585 I don't like the idea of a 'no unpainted armies' in a game store. It's a great way to scare off new people or people who just are bad at painting.
      If you want people to paint their minis, make it easy to paint their minis. Host a weekly or bi-weekly paint jam, where people can get started. Have communal basic supplies (a brush or two, some common pots of paint) and some experienced painters willing to give advice and help out.
      I get the whole "shut up or put up" when it comes to someone complaining about not having time to paint. But complaining about someone else not having their army painted? Personally I think the same advice applies.

    • @SlickRieck
      @SlickRieck 4 роки тому +1

      Seems like a pretty terrible policy to encourage people getting into wargaming, and a pretty convenient story for the youtube comments section.
      If your store runs games 1 day a week for 40k because like any profitable game store they have magic, and other days dedicated to other forms of hobby that support their store financially.
      What imaginary world do you live in where a bunch of wargamers all put down their dice and no one plays and they all say let's talk paint theory .... cool story bro.

  • @Raycheetah
    @Raycheetah 7 років тому +82

    A solitary hobbyist faces this problem alone. It can help to take a page from quilters and crocheters, and get together and paint with a small group of people. If you make the time to get together and share supplies and ideas, you might find that it's easier to get started. You can share pointers, advice, feedback, encouragement, and just good company. It's a lot easier than when it's just you facing those pots and brushes. =^[.]^=

    • @lupuslunarem3235
      @lupuslunarem3235 Рік тому +1

      unfortunately a solitary painter here ;w; got into the hobby mid april, had a box of skitarii rangers and an iron strider my grandma bought me. Currently painting Belisarius Cawl which has taken so far over a month, it's been difficult at times to keep going but I think I'm nearly there

    • @Raycheetah
      @Raycheetah Рік тому

      @@lupuslunarem3235 There are online painting and crafting groups you can join for ideas and encouragement, too. Sometimes all it takes is some feedback to keep you interested in your own work. =^[.]^=

  • @chrisjensen1975
    @chrisjensen1975 5 років тому +70

    Its funny....I actually enjoy the "work" part of it more than playing the game sometimes.

    • @Stuffandstuff974
      @Stuffandstuff974 4 роки тому +9

      The crafting is the hobby. The gaming is the reward.

    • @zacharynetzer819
      @zacharynetzer819 3 роки тому +3

      I hear ya. I suppose you need to be interested in more meditative activities to find the enjoyment. Plus, personally whenever I finish I get that rush of “Wow, I did this?” Being able to use it for a game is just the massive cherry on top.

  • @joshuapierson8656
    @joshuapierson8656 7 років тому +9

    "No such thing as spare time. No such thing as free time. No such thing as down time. All you got is life time" -Henry Rollins

  • @nodepanda7237
    @nodepanda7237 5 років тому +7

    Uncle Atom, I must say that after about fifteen years of looking at miniature painting videos, pirating D&D book pdf files for no real reason and stuff. After I've found your channel I got the 5e books, a 3d printer, an airbrush and some paints and a few D&D nerds. You and Sam got me off my couch and into a chair painting minis and DMing my first homebrew campaign. Thanks for the motivation and inspiration! Big fan!

  • @MrBizteck
    @MrBizteck 7 років тому +293

    TBH ..thats the most mild mannered Rant I've ever saw!!! lol
    Please narrate an audio book your voice is like good whiskey.

    • @tabletopminions
      @tabletopminions  7 років тому +50

      +MrBizteck Well, it felt a bit 'rant-y' at the time, but I *am* generally pretty level headed. Thanks for watching!

    • @discipleprojectoutreach
      @discipleprojectoutreach 7 років тому +5

      Almost Canadian. Atom's from the Midwest I think, so it's pretty close lol.

    • @ThePeacemaker848
      @ThePeacemaker848 7 років тому

      Ya, those border states are pretty close culturally to Canadians.

    • @forgefathereli8354
      @forgefathereli8354 7 років тому

      Well said on his voice, I just found this channel and I'm watching (listening) to videos about things i already know/ concrete opinions from 2 decades of playing that I know wont change, But at least I'm giving Atom a shot!

    • @forgefathereli8354
      @forgefathereli8354 7 років тому +2

      +Paul Turner Yea, I was born in Canada and lived in Alberta (canada's midwest) when i was a kid for a bit, and from my memory your very much correct. He reminds me of the 20 something year olds at the time. In cadence, not behavior. If he's a proper american midwesterner he should be growing pot! lol Everyone I know in the midwest grows pot, but the again I'm as closed to a pot aficionado as it gets, short of the prince of pot himself: Marc Emery. My mom banged him in university. I always like to think I'm what was left over. lol

  • @apocrypha_now4074
    @apocrypha_now4074 7 років тому +22

    That wasn't a rant Uncle Atom, they were the well articulated sentiments of an impassioned individual. Keep up the good work!

  • @philhitchings
    @philhitchings 7 років тому +17

    Having to pack everything away each time I wanted to paint nearly had me at the give up and sell it off point. However, I finally managed to create a permanent hobby space last summer and since then, I've made a commitment to paint/build for a minimum of 30 minutes a day, often more but never less. I don't get a great deal done in half an hour but I do get something done.
    The wet palate has also proved to be a real eye-opener, not just for keeping the paint wet but for giving me the confidence to try blending a little more (so thanks for that video as well :) )

    • @SaturmornCarvilli
      @SaturmornCarvilli 7 років тому +2

      That is what I told my gaming group as I seemed to be the most prolific painter of them. I just have a little work table set aside, and I just paint a little bit here and there. Some days it's only a single bit of paint and 5 minutes. However, it still forward progress. It's enough to keep me on task and gets a painted army faster than most would think.

  • @jaywright9820
    @jaywright9820 5 років тому +10

    Gotta admit, high-level videos have derailed me for months. My standards got so high that I couldn't quite get there and that was holding me back. I'm gonna just start up again and just do it my way. Thanks for this video!

    • @BahamutEx
      @BahamutEx 2 роки тому +1

      yeah, my own high standards kept me from "really" starting the hobby - got models that are still in their boxes today

  • @SunDancerGE
    @SunDancerGE 7 років тому +70

    my problem is usually keeping momentum... something comes in (getting sick, other stuff needs doing) and then I can't find the energy to start again...

    • @LegionaireSiggi
      @LegionaireSiggi 7 років тому +7

      Tim Albers 100% in agreement. And that drained feeling takes so long to go away but when it final does...it's on the days I have to give all my time to other people.

    • @JadeDude1973
      @JadeDude1973 7 років тому +11

      Sometimes, if I have some free time and I don't really feel motivated... I will literally just throw myself at my paint station and go. I know from experience that I can find a million excuses not to start painting, so I just kind of dive in like a commando. Even if it's just one color on one model, progress is progress.

    • @SeparateVision
      @SeparateVision 7 років тому +2

      I try to do it just like you Jade. It's when you can't find motivation that you need to start painting, otherwise you get stuck.

  • @DanielSan1776
    @DanielSan1776 6 років тому +9

    This applies to everything in life.
    Working on cars, becoming a UA-camr, a politician, a motivational speaker, a terrain maker, an athlete
    Solid advice man

  • @MassTrader
    @MassTrader 7 років тому +17

    One advice I have for people, that lack motivation, is to start painting the larger surfaces first and then slowly work down to smaller and smaller surfaces and details. Might seem trivial at first but if you have a hard time getting started it can be very satisfying to see such a large improvement over a short time if you start with the larger surfaces first, then the details.

    • @colinmacmillan2944
      @colinmacmillan2944 7 років тому +2

      'satisfying to see such a large improvement over a short time ' Yep, another good point made by Andrias. You start to see it all coming together and that spurs you on.

  • @renaudst-hilaire9938
    @renaudst-hilaire9938 6 років тому +3

    Your videos raised my painting productivity greatly! Since I've started listening I went through 40 skeletons that were sitting there for almost two months. Thank you!

    • @tabletopminions
      @tabletopminions  6 років тому

      Always glad to help. Keep it up, and thanks for watching!

  • @GeneJordan
    @GeneJordan 6 років тому

    I watched (listened) to this video while I started working on a new piece of scenery. For several weeks, which turned into a few months after moving, I kept telling myself that once I had the major move stuff organized that I would clean off my designated painting area and get down to business with painting, modeling, scenery creation. It just wasn't happening and I kept putting it off. About a week ago, I cleaned all the stuff that had accumulated on my painting desk off of it. The next day, I put up my lights, found the box with my paints/brushes, then dug out some miniatures that I had previously assembled. Sometimes just getting started is a motivation to keep making progress.
    I have an acquaintance whom I painted with years ago. One time he was asked when he was going to get a few squad of Space Marines painted. His response was that he was going to paint them after he got better at painting! He was a decent tabletop level painter then, but I've always wondered how he thought he would improve his painting skills without painting more models, especially the basic troops types.

  • @obedpacheco5420
    @obedpacheco5420 7 років тому

    I am so happy I watched this now. You've revamped my drive to paint. I've been in and out of 'starting,' yes, just starting the painting. You're rant was exactly what I needed to hear! Thanks!

  • @GreatOldPete
    @GreatOldPete 7 років тому +28

    I think alot of people get discouraged cause they don't get that doing it well requires time and practice. You watch all the awesome miniatures online and you get this vision in your head, where you buy bunch of paints and will instantly be an awesome painter. Then, once you're done with your first models and it turns out that you are just not so great, you realise that you actualy have to LEARN it, just like anything else. It can get overwhelming for some people, the concept of how much time you need to put into learning how to paint. It's also the times we have now, we want instant effects, we want everything fast. People need to realise that the process of learning, exploring new techniques, can also be pleasant and satisfying as hell. Every once in awhile you'll reach a new "skill level" and it is basicly like leveling up in a game, suddenly you just become better and better. Get interested in progressing, see what you can do, that should be your goal, not instatly becoming a pro.

    • @tabletopminions
      @tabletopminions  7 років тому +7

      +Piotr Zając Very good point. People forget that skills take practice. Thanks for watching!

    • @JohnSmith-dk6on
      @JohnSmith-dk6on 7 років тому +3

      Piotr Zając I couldn't agree more. When i first got into Warhammer 40k years ago, i thought painting would be easy, I'd watched the videos, had all the equipment and had a steady hand. Of course, after painting my first model, it became apparent that i had no idea what i was doing and it looked terrible, which was extremely discouraging. I recently picked it back up and I've learnt that if you take your time, even if it takes hours to paint half a model, the results are more than worth it and you'll slowly get better and better and thus, more and more confident.

    • @colinmacmillan2944
      @colinmacmillan2944 7 років тому +2

      You're right. You're absolutely right - I tried painting recently, then when I went back I thought which eight-year old painted this (that's being unfair on eight-year olds!). Mental note: Stop comparing yourself to that on UA-cam!

    • @BoredLyron
      @BoredLyron 5 років тому

      While that is definitely a part of it for many people, it depends quite a bit on the person. When I'm picking up a new skill, I do it a lot. I know I'm going to suck, but I also know that my progress will be fairly fast in the beginning and I want to prove to myself that I can be at least decent at it. (Que 6 hour sessions every day for a week of trying to learn to contact juggle.) However after I've proven to myself that it is something I can do fairly well and that by continuing practice, I could be good at it, that motivation drops off and if I'm to keep doing whatever it is, I need another motivator.
      Also, I'm a fairly good painter (I should be, I've been doing it for more than 30 years) and I, as well as most other great non-professional painters tend to suffer from this too. So I do think that while what you say is a factor for some people, it's definitely the only reason for this. (For me, it's that there are about 20 million interesting things that I love learning and doing, so there will always be too little time. Fortunately for painting, it doesn't take that much prep, so it's one of the easier ones to pick up and start doing.)

    • @noahquintin3013
      @noahquintin3013 4 роки тому

      @@JohnSmith-dk6on Just a fun little fact, I have a really unsteady hand and still manage to paint! In fact, because of how my hands shake sometimes, it lead me to understanding how to thin paints and layer!

  • @meow999meow
    @meow999meow 5 років тому +1

    I listen to you while I'm painting/sculpting. Have learned more about my hobby in a few days than I've learned from the years of collecting miniatures. You've really sparked the light in my hobby again. I feel the urge to go out and play =D

  • @mcdutchman415
    @mcdutchman415 5 років тому

    11:44 Thanks for including that! I laughed so hard. The quality of your vids is very well balanced. The effort you put into your channel as well as the hobby is greatly appreciated by my son and I. We're just getting started and we enjoy your content!

  • @mrnemo636
    @mrnemo636 7 років тому

    This is very encouraging. Seriously love all of your videos. Just ordered a paint set earlier this week to finally take the plunge and paint my minis.

  • @Pablo-pe2rv
    @Pablo-pe2rv 7 років тому +5

    I was actually basecoating some old models and this video made my day. I want to say that is great that you want to get more people into the hobby. Your videos have been great for my motivation, as I got back to wargames less than a year ago, so I won't ever grow tired about videos for begginers hahaha. Thanks, Atom!

  • @Argosh
    @Argosh 6 років тому +2

    I watched a lot of your videos and they played a huge part in getting me started. I finally got the AoS starter kit after wanting to start wargaming for 10+ years. Thanks man!

  • @StormWildSpace
    @StormWildSpace 7 років тому +47

    My biggest issue is staying power. I paint a bunch of minis, and if for some reason I have to stop for more than an hour or two, I find it challenging to get back to it a day or a week later.

  • @GraysenOlson
    @GraysenOlson 5 років тому +1

    Love this I'm literally painting as I'm watching your videos. Keep up the videos man you really motivate me to stay in the hobby.

  • @starbux52
    @starbux52 6 років тому +1

    Thanks for doing this video, parts of it really resonated with me. I've been putting off doing my hobby for years now due to life and health reasons (which eventually became just excuses). After watching this, I just went for it. Have gotten more done in the past month than in the past 4 years. Thanks for helping bring me back into the fold, Atom.

  • @skinned15
    @skinned15 7 років тому +5

    Preach! I have been playing table top games for 28 years now and it took me a very long time to learn this!! Where were you to get my as painting 20 years ago! Great video.

  • @adamjohn3839
    @adamjohn3839 7 років тому +9

    Great rant. This was me up until literally a few days ago. I had boxes of grey plastic models that I haven't played with as didn't want to play without paint on them... but could never 'find the time' (just procrastinate and make excuses instead) to paint. So I just made myself sit down with a unit of clanrats and about 5 paints and base coated them whilst watching Duncan guide me through it. I found the process hugely enjoyable with a touch of frustration thrown in for good measure. But the result is a unit that just need a wash and I would be happy to put them on the table top to play and I am eager to get on with the rest of the army!

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 7 років тому +4

      Did you remember to apply two thin coats of paint? :-)

  • @pedrosouza9508
    @pedrosouza9508 7 років тому +5

    I was painting my first mini (Commander Dante) while watching this. Thanks for the video!

  • @casualcommanders230
    @casualcommanders230 7 років тому +1

    Thank you for reinforcing the idea that we can all make time to do things we love and enjoy. Perspective is a powerful thing. I've attempted to show and tell the same idea.. albeit, in my own simplistic way. Thanks again.

  • @drtarte5433
    @drtarte5433 5 років тому +1

    Just started last week. Got the dark imperium starter set and loved every moment of solitude while gluing the parts together with a small pair of fabric scissors and a nail file while listening to some audiobooks. My local hobby shop has beginner painting sessions every sunday where they make use of all those Easy to Build primaris marines as practice painting palets. Your vids and those of many others have been a godsend to getting me off my duff and starting on something that i may find a bit more fulfilling-or at the very least different- from my usual PC gaming. Thank you for your years of service!

  • @ComradeBozzey
    @ComradeBozzey 7 років тому

    I have so much love for this video. I've recently just got back into the hobby after 15 years away. I spent a good month just watching your videos Adam among others ( Warhammer TV, Striking Scorpion ) and I could not wait to paint my first models.
    I was nervous but I followed alot of the basic tips ( Wet palette, thinning paint, pacing yourself in the amount of models ) and it's worked a treat. I've just finished my first 15 cadians with a heavy Bolter team and yesterday I was just so happy with how they looked and came out. I was nervous about the camo on my snipers but worst comes to the worst i can order more.... but they turned our perfect.
    I also found that pacing yourself and the idea of rewarding yourself with new models once you've completed others is perfect for me.I finished my first unit of cadian shock trooper .. and treated myself with a heavy weapons team, Once completed, i treated myself to 2 snipers and 1 melta gunner and 1 plasma gunner and now they have been done I am moving on.
    I've also found watching streams ( yours and warhammer Tv) while I paint is a great side with actually painting and i cannot wait for your live streams, just so i can get 2 hours or so under my belt and start or finish up models. Listening to people talk about the hobby while your doing it shows passion and commitment on both ends.
    It can be daunting, but it's the self will that you will get better at painting. You will get better at prep work or building them. You learn from every model you finish, how you should approach the next one better. I know my 5th or 6th cadian platoon is going to look so much better than my first and yet right now, I'd be happy to chuck my first 15 guys on a table and go hammer and anvil on come chaos or alien models.
    Thank You adam and please more live streams .... I have a Cadian sentinel coming this weekend and i need to relax while I build it haha !

  • @mrsantanaexe
    @mrsantanaexe 7 років тому

    Your channel motivates me to keep on doing my mini painting, it also encouraged me to start my own channel, it is not the greatest production but at least i talk more now and then, you have great content, remember that your hobby and passion motivates some of us, keep doing this great and excellent work

  • @brettsimpson1505
    @brettsimpson1505 7 років тому +1

    Uncle Atom: I find your videos VERY motivational. Today is a special day for me, for I completed a painting project that was quite important to me. There were times when I thought "I can't paint today!" -- but then I heard your voice reverberating from a previous video saying "Just finish!". Now it's done and the games await! Thank you, and best wishes from Australia -- Brett.

  • @Ben-zv5op
    @Ben-zv5op 5 років тому

    I've been watching your content for the last week or so and it has been very important for me... I started my Mini-war gaming journey when I was 8 years old during visits to the mall with my parents, I would beg to be left in the Gamesworkshop just to look at the incredible miniatures other people were putting together. I collected piecemeal units and characters (painted terribly) throughout my childhood but going into HS stopped collecting because I got into other things.
    Since graduating HS I've moved a few times and each time unearthed my old carrying cases and would spend some time remembering the joy these models brought me at some point. The other day, with the support of my significant other and your wise words I visited my local game store (the same manager was there, some 15 years later) and invested in a paint collection and my army Codex (For Russ and the Allfather!).
    Spent the last two days building my Space Wolf beginner box, purchased years ago, and am currently painting my first Blood Claw unit whilst watching more of your content! People like you are the lifeblood of this hobby and truly rekindled my love of this hobby.

  • @acidtux
    @acidtux 7 років тому

    That part starting from 10:45 was nice to hear. I already knew this stuff, but hearing it while I'm doing my thing (currently 54 mm sculpture, very rookie and struggling to go through and finish a first piece) it's nice to hear that my first piece is going to be imperfect and that I'll have to improve. I was (kind of still am) in a mindset like "will it look the way I want? I want it to be perfect". I just figured out it better not, or else i'll never be done. I already spent too much time on it, and it's about time I finish it in the rough to see where I'm okay and where I have ways to go.
    I was so focused on perfection that I kept going back and re-doing every step, but I might as well finish a bad piece that I'll reflect on rather than take a lifetime to (never) complete a masterpiece.
    Thanks for the pep talk, it changed my take on things and might help me finish something and start learning from my unavoidable mistakes.

  • @MatthewBester
    @MatthewBester 7 років тому

    Brilliant rant, I had hobby block for about 7-8 years but I am pleased to say I am back at it modelling painting and playing! Cheers unc for the pearls of wisdom.

  • @drawjamesdraw
    @drawjamesdraw 7 років тому +14

    Relevant for any hobby or creative pursuit. I'm an illustrator and when people ask me how to become an illustrator, they're usually disappointed when I answer "just draw". I'm also set on learning guitar, but it's taken me 3 months of overthinking to actually go and buy one...

    • @colinmacmillan2944
      @colinmacmillan2944 7 років тому +4

      'overthinking' - yep, that's me. But I suppose I could call it 'planning in advance'?

    • @SoulSoundMuisc
      @SoulSoundMuisc 7 років тому +4

      The best advice I've gotten about overthinking or planning things too much comes from an older co-worker "Don't outsmart yourself."

    • @SabreXT
      @SabreXT 7 років тому

      The problem with the "just draw" advice is that it doesn't always work. I used to draw as a kid, and do now (not at a professional level) but I had almost 10 years of no improvement. There was a book (drawing on the right side of the brain) had some great advice, and while I didn't see the same improvements as others, I think it helped me get out of that rut. Maybe I could have "just draw"ed my way out? I don't know. But it seemed to help.

    • @SoulOfJungle
      @SoulOfJungle 7 років тому

      Learning guitar I think is something you benefit substantially from having a teacher for, because the issue there is direction and technical humps to get over. If you can afford it of course, but even asking a friend for a couple of lessons is great. Then again, self teaching has created people like BB King but the fact is it will be that much harder.

  • @robwallace6787
    @robwallace6787 7 років тому

    Great video Uncle! Your advice to be honest with ourselves about what our personal take on the hobby is, and how much time we're willing or able to commit to it, is crucial in deciding how far to take our individual involvement.
    When I came through from the Fighting Fantasy books, Hero Quest, Subbuteo and saw things like Atmosfear, historical armies and GW I was looking for deeper, more immersive and challenging games. I really bought into the fluff, I loved the detailed models and scenery, and I wanted a part of that.
    Although I was naturally talented at drawing, I never counted on having to build and paint pretty much the entire game before getting to play, and to be fair I've never put much effort into learning and mastering the rules, and I wasted years not committing the time to preparation in either regard while setting unrealistically high targets and trying to keep up with friends who managed these issues better.
    That situation's barely changed in over 20 years, but I've gotten better.
    I have more specific goals, and although I have many more games to prepare and enjoy than when I started, I now have a (more) defined end outcome: to complete what I have so I can use it, then enjoy polishing off the pet projects, while avoiding the new cool stuff as much as possible, starting today I promise!
    In light of other projects coming up in the next few months including study for work, I also have a time limit on my hobby commitment: basically I need to put the bigger projects to bed by the end of summer so I can shift my focus.
    I'm now far more willing to pay for materials that help me achieve my goals faster. The new Shadow War terrain is a perfect example, it practically builds itself, although my enthusiasm for it makes working with it enjoyable. I also bought my first coloured spray, Retributor Armour, for my Scourge Dropfleet and my only regret is having hand painted my Dropzone army! I literally painted my army in an evening.
    I'm also more prepared to pay for commission work, a very talented young lady has knocked out some Fleshtearer Sanguinary Guard and Space Wolf Blood Claws for me at a price I'm happy with, delivering quality I couldn't deliver without trying extremely hard in time that I'm unwilling to afford, within a time frame that I just couldn't match. This affords me time to work on models I want to work on myself, such as my Nomads on clear Perspex bases.
    I've redefined my expectations and reined in that drive for completion and perfection. Part of me yearns to return to that MB approach to the models: coloured plastic, monopose, generic models. I have a horde of Orcs recently returned to me, plus my old Heroquest models, and although I collect Undead and some Empire the Greenskins and Ogres will see little love from me; I'm reducing my expectations accordingly:
    . Do I want to rebase them to match my Fantasy stuff? Probably yes.
    . Do I need to fully paint them, if at all? I like the single colour thing and it's very easy, so no. I'll buy the GW coloured base coats, maybe give them a wash, then see if I care to take them any further.
    . Do I need to take so much time cleaning the models? I've tried so hard to remove sprue lines and fill gaps on my other collections and although it costs time in its own right, my aversion to committing to this in the first place really slows me down, often for weeks. I look forward to seeing those imperfections in my finished models, knowing I chose to leave them there and enjoying that nostalgia even if some fellow hobbyists may disapprove.
    More generally I've spent a lot of time judging the relative value of my hobby compared with other pursuits and life in general:
    . Work's taken off well over the past year and I need to push for bigger things while the opportunities are available
    . I have a fiancée and young son who I need to spend more time with
    . I also practise and teach karate, an area where my ambitions far outreach my commitment in time or money, moreso than with wargames.
    . I've loved playing and listening to music for a long time. This was the third major pursuit I allowed to wither after Scouting and religion, which I quit entirely.
    The lessons I learned from these pastimes stay with me; it makes me sad to reflect on or dabble in some knowing I could have tried harder or done more with them, while I regretted wasting my time on others I felt obliged to see through. I firmly believe that we ultimately commit to what we're drawn to, and if we fight that instinct we end up fighting ourselves, and that's not a fun or healthy way to live.

  • @alienpartridge
    @alienpartridge Рік тому +1

    It took me 26 years to start building and painting Warhammer (that’s 26 years from first being aware of Warhammer!). Although I bought the odd miniature or two along the way, i only started dedicating time to the hobby last year. I didn’t have the concentration span as a kid, and only occasionally remembered miniatures existed, let alone having the focus to buy and paint them. I loved the concept but i never moved past being a spectator watching the hobby from a safe distance. But finally after a few years of watching your videos I started buying miniatures. I still haven’t ever played any tabletop war games, but I have started dedicating time to buying, building and priming models. I even started painting the models (not just priming them). My nostalgia is for the 90’s metal Warhammer models, but I have also started collecting modem minis as well.

  • @ChiTownHero
    @ChiTownHero 7 років тому

    Hah, That blooper at the end and your reaction was spot on! Another motivating video.. Thanks Atom

  • @Mike75W
    @Mike75W 2 роки тому +1

    New to the hobby, came across your videos/channel - all I can say is thank you! Very helpful and funny. 🙂

  • @hobbiest6831
    @hobbiest6831 4 роки тому

    Time management? This is something I think allot of people need to apply to not just their war gaming but other areas of their life as well. Over the last year ive gone from wanting to play warhammer and watching your vids to building and painting a 2000 pt. army and actually playing occasionally. On top of this working ffull time and building up my career in my own time. I feel the biggest piece of the puzzle is time management and dedication. Thank you atom wise words, it's great to have this kind of content for the hobby.

  • @thecrazycabbage5777
    @thecrazycabbage5777 5 років тому +7

    Id just like to say; Thanks!
    I dont play tabletop gaming. I actually found your channel for inspirtion and ideas for painting - i scratch build and kit bash kits for model railways of all things. However, this vid, and a few of your previous ones, almost 'shamed' me into just....just doing it. Just crack on and do it. I queue some videos up on you tube, and let them run in the background whilst im doing it.
    Dont stop, stay awesome!

  • @connorolewio
    @connorolewio 7 років тому

    You have a great platform here and this was a great video. You're speaking on the same level as some of my favourite role models but your doing it with relations to a relatively manageable topic. People can take this advice and apply it to this relatively small aspect of their life and then go onto apply it to everything they do. There is no point in fearing failure and success is addictive. As soon as you have success you want more. So as long as you are willing to make that first step, and push for success, you will get it and then you'll never want anything else! Great video and a great message, thank you.

  • @fredoblong
    @fredoblong 5 років тому

    Oof, you hit a home run with this. Got into board gaming a year ago via KS and the 1st minis are just now coming in. Bought a ton of supplies to ready myself and now all I do is watch videos, like yours, to learn and buy more supplies thinking I will need that before I start. I dont watch TV much but I do read a paper for an hour when I get home. Thanks for the kick, time to start throwing paint! Keep those starter vids coming!

  • @user-kx6th1qm9x
    @user-kx6th1qm9x 7 років тому

    Great video as always! I don't have much of a free time but I try to put some hobby work now and then. Also, listening to your videos really helps! Inspiration and motivation at the same time!

  • @consolecowboy74
    @consolecowboy74 5 років тому +1

    I love your videos and I am just starting to paint. Thanks for everything and I hope your channel grows and you keep doing zactly what you are doing.

  • @joemoe974
    @joemoe974 7 років тому

    This is one of Uncle Atom's best videos to date! There was a time when I would sit and look at pictures of amazingly painted miniatures and terrain, and then sigh and go, "OH how do they do that, I wish I could but I can't." Then finally one day I said I had had enough. I wanted to BE one of those wargamers who could paint stuff to a degree that other people would say that about my stuff. I realized that I just needed to stop saying I wanted to and just f'n start!
    It wasn't because of narcissim or needing to get attention. I wanted for my own satisfaction to be one of those mini. painters where I could look at my OWN work and go "wow"!
    My first drybrushing and shading attempts at miniatures were awkward and clunky. But I had to go through that phase before I got better. THAT was when I realized it was happening! I knew that with some hobbies in life, you cannot "go around" or "take shortcuts". You simply have to take the time to actually build things and paint them. That's the realization of the hobby that transforms it into a reality for you.

  • @matthewcaron3319
    @matthewcaron3319 7 років тому +2

    Interestingly, I paint while watching TV, and that's one of my motivators - paint and watch a show.
    Thing is, I end up being very busy with other stuff - board game night, RPG game night, messing around with 3D printers, try to exercise a couple of times a week... really only leaves one or two nights a week to paint.

  • @dtps_champion6016
    @dtps_champion6016 2 роки тому +1

    first video I've seen from you and an instant subscription! I love your vibe

  • @valvalvalvalval17
    @valvalvalvalval17 7 років тому +2

    Love it. Thanks again. Will get to it tomorrow.

  • @Triceratopping
    @Triceratopping 7 років тому

    I've really gotten off my ass this past year; since May last year I've thrown myself back into the hobby and done more building, painting, and playing in the past 12 months than I have done in the past 5 years, and your channel really helped me do that!

  • @thrasher99999
    @thrasher99999 6 років тому +1

    I've randomly come across your channel tonight, and while I know this video is almost a year old, it resonates with me a lot as of late. While my creative hobbies are primarily more Gunpla, I do thoroughly enjoy miniatures too and kitbashing the whole array of them all! Now... Unfortunately work and life has been kickin' my butt lately however, the few videos that I've caught from you tonight has done wonders to get my drive going. So, sincerely, thank you.

  • @mcdonaldmatthew41
    @mcdonaldmatthew41 5 років тому +1

    Your videos really gave me the final push to pull the trigger and jump back into 40k after being gone for 4 editions. Im so glad i did i have the fincial means to play the army i always wanted to play (imperial gaurd) and ive met a lot of cool new friends from playing at my local store.

  • @brianhuss9184
    @brianhuss9184 5 років тому +1

    While painting I set a portable DVD player at the corner of my painting desk and play my favorite shows / movies, or listen to podcasts on my mp3 player. Sometimes I'll take my latest painting project to the hobby shop and sit and have conversation while painting. I nearly finished up 5 Aeldari grav tanks yesterday at the shop! They should be done by the end of next week; basing, decals, and the main gun on the Fire Prism are all that's left. Do whatever will get you painting. Try different methods. When you finish a Unit you WILL get a sense of accomplishment!

  • @paganteabreak7245
    @paganteabreak7245 4 роки тому +1

    I LOVE my hobby and get up early everyday to get my 2 hour daily fix before the family rises and work. Weekends is craft and playing with family. I love the week prep to play new models at the weekend 👍🏻 Currently finishing some Vikings and Saxons for Saga, then onto the Pelannor Fields set for Middle Earth...
    Great video! You’re one of my multitasked channels during hobby :)

  • @JHB141
    @JHB141 7 років тому +1

    Thank you so VERY much for recommending that people think about dropping the "boob tube" as my parents used to call it. I let my satellite subscription lapse, and it was the best thing I ever did. I now DO something when I'm not at work, whether is painting, fishing, playing with the dogs, etc. Your videos and others have helped that happen, so many many thanks!

  • @twitchybristles
    @twitchybristles 7 місяців тому

    I come back to this video like every six months and rewatch it because it's legitimately some of the best life advice I've ever gotten.

  • @KudiGamer
    @KudiGamer 2 роки тому +1

    great video, really puts hobbies/hobbying into perspective

  • @avoidconfusion
    @avoidconfusion 7 років тому

    Love your videos! 50k subscribers soon!

  • @maximusspqr
    @maximusspqr 7 років тому +3

    I like to play movies in the background that I've already seen a zillion times. Then I listen most of the time and occasionally watch my favourite parts of the movie. It's always worked well.

    • @tabletopminions
      @tabletopminions  7 років тому +2

      Glad it works for you. Even if I've seen it a zillion times, I'd still end up focusing on it, I think. Thanks for watching!

  • @lauripaulo
    @lauripaulo 7 років тому

    Awesome video. It's been a while since I'm watching your show and I like it a lot. Thank you for the rant, sometimes it is needed. Cheers.

  • @bomb5hock
    @bomb5hock 3 роки тому

    The thing that helped me most was your video that taught me how to strip models.

  • @Failerist
    @Failerist 7 років тому

    Man.. we love your videos. We really do.

  • @aaronnewton9398
    @aaronnewton9398 7 років тому

    I definitely got more interested in painting thanks to videos from people like Ben Komets but the idea that you should probably not watch advanced videos if you want to get started painting minis to play with is definitely true. It can be inspiring but it can also be a lot more daunting than it needs to be. What I learned (and so many in the hobby know but rarely say) when I finally got going, after setting aside the fear of messing up, is that all those extreme highlights and shadows and details mean next to nothing on the tabletop. At one point I sat a mini I had base coated, washed, and applied one simple highlight next to one I'd gone through the trouble of extra detailing and black lining and yadda yadda yadda... and they looked virtually identical on the table top.
    Don't shoot for display quality! Don't even think about it! Get a couple thin base coats, wash to bring out some details and set it aside, and they can look amazing on the table!
    Great video Adam! Get going people! It doesn't have to be complicated and seeing even basic paints on the minis on the table is very rewarding!!!

  • @wizrdlizrd8805
    @wizrdlizrd8805 5 років тому

    JUST what I needed to hear. Tough love!

  • @ayoldguy1
    @ayoldguy1 7 років тому +2

    Thanks so much for this direction... I've just started from "0" and have the time... but the idea of putting paint on a model has seemed daunting to me. I have one or two models under my belt, but still feel like I want to proceed cautiously. Looking forward to the videos!

  • @TurnStyleGames
    @TurnStyleGames 7 років тому

    Excellent video as always. Wargaming is one of those hobbies which is tough because...progress begets progress. As you paint something, you become faster. You figure out the tricks, you start figuring out what you can and can't get away with. The next unit becomes easier. As your army grows, the grey plastic becomes more unpalatable to you. Once you have a fully painted army, it's such a great feeling - it then motivates you to do so in the future. For people complaining about not having time to paint - if you're playing the game...you have time to paint. I've seen people complain about not having time to paint - while they're spending 3-4 hours at the shop playing the game. Take one or two of your gaming days...and put some paint to your models. We live in a golden age of "cheating". We have colour primers, dips, washes, pre-made bases, etc. There's nothing worse than going 10 years without really ever getting to enjoy the full aspect of the hobby (painted minis on a beautiful table filled with terrain), etc.

  • @coreydrrumm1234
    @coreydrrumm1234 5 років тому +1

    Just found your videos and you did in fact get me addicted or at least start the hobby thanks for all the info in your videos

  • @Cthulhusuperstar
    @Cthulhusuperstar 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks man, I really needed to hear this, three years later.

  • @MrStath1986
    @MrStath1986 7 років тому

    I definitely appreciate the comment on not looking at 'super-high level' stuff when it comes to starting out. I think part of what made things super daunting at first in buying GW stuff was the codexes and those super-gorgeous 'Eavy Metal masterfully painted kits, so it was a struggle for me to get going at first, and.. Then I looked around, and found other alternatives from GW themselves; the little paint splatter articles, the videos from Duncan, all of them really helped build my confidence, to the point I felt I'd actually made something fantastic when painting Nagash.
    But for me, it's.. Small steps. I rarely show my models off, and I think part of my hobby is doing it just because I like painting the kits, but I also did my first Armies on Parade last year - a basic AOS Death display with Nagash, Neferata and co atop the board with the big cogs - and got a lot of compliments for it. And I think in terms of getting stuff out there, that really helps. It strikes me that unless you're with the wrong crowd entirely, then you're always going to either get compliments or constructive criticism about how to improve or what looks good. So finding an entry level, and interacting even only a little has been a big deal for me.

  • @rking1813
    @rking1813 6 років тому

    You are 100% correct !! After watching many vids of you and some of the others I started painting 😀 I'm in my 50s and painted my very first miniature ever a couple months ago, I started my 10th today 😉 Thanks !! Enjoy all of your vids !!

  • @noturaveragehermit6958
    @noturaveragehermit6958 5 років тому

    I am just getting into this and was blessed by picking up the book 5150 and meeting someone that would help me with questions being I live as a solo hermit. I have nothing but time really at age 43 and have played many video games. But something has always been missed, something like creating my own world and doing things how I wanted to do them. I have had this vision for quite some time even writing a short sci-fi book on this vision world that simply went nowhere ( total wasted time, money and effort). I then heard about solo wargaming and found out I can build my own world and play it. I am still waiting on some of the supplies as I read the book especially the terrain area so I know how to set up certain things when I build them, being I plan on getting into painting and making scenery. My problem isn't motivation or time or tv being I only watch 2 hours a night, in which that can easily be reduced as well. It is a thyroid disorder that I am battling and have planted some victory flags on it such as all the weight I lost but still, energy sometimes comes and goes. But to maintain my health and well being takes a lot of elements like yoga, eating times, etc having a complete schedule for the day that is a must if I want to keep on chugging. So it will be interesting how this all pans out but I am setting things up to try and minimize energy like a painting station in my house for the things I can do In my house and the scenery, props, priming in the garage. I have worked with foam before so I know there is some work involved but I think it will be worth it to see with my own eyes my world that I have envisioned come to life. Great videos I am learning a lot:).

  • @markfoster7166
    @markfoster7166 5 років тому

    This video... Tru dat especially the bit about limited time. We only have so much and as someone said to me recently " tomorrow's not a promise". Keep the content coming I love it

  • @Twbwyattear
    @Twbwyattear 7 років тому

    You didnt get me into the hobby, but your videos kept me from giving up. That wet palette video was a god send. You also got me into AoS

  • @devonwrayn
    @devonwrayn 5 років тому +2

    Cant express enough how much I appreciate your channel. Video Gaming has been the go to hobby forever but over the years has been drifting away with the direction the industry has gone. Plus iv missed past artistic activities i used to do. Felt lost a bit till my brother brought my interest to warhammer. now im so deep in the lore and painting tutorials I wish i had came to this years ago. Thankfully though im in a position in life where I can actually afford to get into it and have a wonderful fiance who is a art school graduate who can help teach me how the heck paint works lol. Cant wait to get started with kill team and putting the troops together while meeting new friends in the workshops, watching your vids each day helps throw coal in the fire too, keep up the great work =)!

  • @ghettoewok3902
    @ghettoewok3902 6 років тому

    I have my sets next to my computer now, so in between matches or waiting for buddies to get on, I just turn to the side and do some painting really quick. Helps keep interested over a longer period.

  • @tapioperala3010
    @tapioperala3010 6 років тому

    I usually love rant videos. :D
    They are fun. :P
    But, like many other rant videos, this one, too, has awesome information and ideas.
    Personally, 40k has been a really important part of my life for years.
    Now that I've started painting (and I haven't broken a single model yet! :O ), I've been "introduced" to the other part of this hobby.
    Great video, keep 'em coming!
    Edit:
    I've got hundreds of models, over 90 % painted.
    I've never painted a single one, not fully.
    I've started twice before, but those ended up in broken models, and curses, etc. I just don't really have the patience ("nerves", as we say in Finland :P ) to really put effort into the painting.
    But now I've started, and I want to paint at least some of those things.
    Why? Because it's one part of this hobby, and I want to explore that, as well.
    Besides, I can paint with my son (3 yo)! :D

  • @chinglee
    @chinglee 6 років тому

    Thank you for all your videos. I just started painting miniatures. I pretty much never painted, anything, in my life. So I am really just taking baby steps, literally. Yes, it took me a bit to get started. One day I said, well, might as well get it started otherwise I will never do it. I love all your videos/tutorials. Please keep up the great work that you are doing for the community, specially for NOOBS like me!!!

  • @vyzetta
    @vyzetta 5 років тому +7

    This video is great, all true. It played beautifully over the lo-fi hip hop I was listening to.

  • @ScGendo
    @ScGendo 7 років тому

    I like the conversation across your videos about getting motivated/started and I appreciate them.
    Your perspective is from a sole hobby/past time, something you do for the rest of your life which is wrong...
    I started reading a 40k novel and getting stuck into the building/painting, I really enjoy the process and feel proud of my army, found a great local gaming club and went from there.
    I dedicated a couple of months of my spare time to paint my army and getting as many games as i could, but right now I keep the social gaming bit and relegate the building/painting of extra models to 1 day a week, that said I mostly collect for my army or allies.
    This has been the best compromise for me as I also enjoy riding sportsbikes on a daily basis, track days and overall mainteinance of bike and gear which is a time hog by itself.

  • @ianshaliczer
    @ianshaliczer 7 років тому

    Social media and a few friends who are also in the hobby - even if they live thousands of miles away - can also be a great motivator. Seeing those silly Thumbs Up! 👍 emojis under every pic of an in progress paint job is a very nice treat.

  • @obiwon_ben8028
    @obiwon_ben8028 5 років тому +1

    Thank you for this video because I used to paint years ago and gave it up. Yet for years I contemplated getting into it but just never started. Well, I'm glad to say I'm getting back on the horse. I just put in a massive order and am waiting for my tools, paints and such. I'm back baby .... wish me luck :)

  • @zapapala
    @zapapala 7 років тому +65

    This video reminded me of that Shia Lebouef video where he shouts "JUST DO IT!"

    • @romangudev8770
      @romangudev8770 6 років тому +2

      Except this time it isn't mentally depraved.

  • @humanitys_last_chad
    @humanitys_last_chad 5 років тому +2

    What an inspiring and awesome video. Rock on man 🤘🏻

  • @conker466
    @conker466 5 років тому +1

    One of the most rational cool youtubers I've seen. keep up the great work and videos :)

  • @JohnClarkGaming
    @JohnClarkGaming 6 років тому +1

    I love audiobooks while modeling i find it very therapeutic.

  • @Legofingers
    @Legofingers 7 років тому

    Hey Atom, watched all your vids, 1st comment; have to say this was your best and most impassioned vid yet. Great news that you'll be doing more vids from 0 to "something", your vids got me back into the hobby and IMO were the best place to start for the new guy/girl, I really think TM is the perfect place for new starters and re-visitors, keep up the great work.

  • @Bugsy58
    @Bugsy58 7 років тому

    The obviousness of you message is, well, obvious! But, all too often, we all need, at some time or another, the 'obvious' planted squarely in our face, before we start nodding along in total agreement! So for that, I thank you for this clip. I am slowly, but surely, replacing the time I used to spend watching TV, with viewing UA-cam clips directly associated with my hobby. I have found that this, more often than not, inspires and encourages me to get on with the miriad of projects, as opposed to just thinking about and maybe planning them. So, Good Luck with your endeavours and thanks again for sharing.

  • @yoinkn
    @yoinkn 6 років тому

    A good advice for me was painting in a group. That's how i started painting again a few weeks ago, i got together with some friends and we painted. And if one is more experienced than the others it is a really good source of tips.

  • @Hobbywhiledad
    @Hobbywhiledad 7 років тому +5

    I love the hobby side of table top gaming...my problem is finding the time to actually play games. I can give myself an hour a day to hobby but I can't fit in 3+ hours to game. This is even more the case when I have to work around GamesWorkshop store hours (11a-7p) and my FLGS is a 30min drive away so then getting there and home takes an hour out of gaming time.
    Also I'm glad you hit the hobby from these points of discussion rather than just army construction and painting techniques. I feel like you take an outside looking in approach to the hobby and it's pretty refreshing to hear something different once and a while.

    • @mouseketeery
      @mouseketeery 5 років тому

      Bit late for a reply .....but....what about Kill Team or Underworlds (Shadespire and now Nightvault)? Small model counts and fast games. You could keep your usual hobby of collecting/painting/displaying, but also have a separate game that's connected in-universe but isn't time-greedy. Best of both worlds but fits into real life. These skirmish-scale games are proving very popular as there's no heavy investment required in money or time.

  • @nicklarocco4178
    @nicklarocco4178 7 років тому +1

    When I got back into mini wargaming from about a 10 year stint I really changed my perspective on it. When I was younger all I cared about was playing the game, I hardly painted anything because I wanted to spend all my time playing. I got back into it recently and watched a ton of tutorial videos, and now I feel like I'm a pretty good painter. No one, when I was younger, really taught me how to paint outside of dry brushing. Now I've only played one game of AoS since I got back into it (admittedly I'm still waiting for an ebay lot, but my friend didn't mind me proxying a couple things while I wait), and I've spent almost every single day painting, and I'm really enjoying it. Just getting to sit back at a finished model and show it to someone and say "I did that, me, alone. I didn't pay anyone to put it together, I didn't pay anyone to paint it. That's all me." Feels good.

  • @adamfox1669
    @adamfox1669 5 років тому +1

    So true. Time management isn’t easy. All about balance and motivation. Great post

  • @raze83
    @raze83 5 років тому

    This video is absolute pure gold. Totally changed my world. Thanks Atom!
    Also what I have figured out that "setting up principles" is also just lying to yourself because you will give them up in a second. "I'm not buying a new mini until I finish painting yada yada"

  • @andregilhespy7504
    @andregilhespy7504 7 років тому

    That outtake at the end! Bahahahahaaaaaa! Your face was priceless! I can't stop cracking up :,D

  • @dorjedriftwood2731
    @dorjedriftwood2731 7 років тому +35

    I don't watch tv. I watch UA-cam tutorials. Not sure I should stop that, I get a lot of inspiration .

    • @tabletopminions
      @tabletopminions  7 років тому +23

      +DorjeDriftwood I probably watch five times as much UA-cam as TV in any given week. Also, I frequently watch UA-cam while painting (unlike television) because I'm usually just listening and there's rarely a narrative to keep track of in UA-cam videos. Plus, I can rewind or pause. Thanks for watching!

    • @Endohell
      @Endohell 3 роки тому

      i watch tutorial and i do nothing :0

  • @lunahula
    @lunahula 7 років тому +1

    Since getting back into the crafting/painting element of the hobby last year. Video games have made way for occasional casual dip ins. Wathing shows has made way for watching shows... while taking off mould lines, fixing surfaces and prepping. I don't regret this shift though, because it's a greater sense of accomplishment in doing something significant that lasts.

  • @pedrot.2964
    @pedrot.2964 7 років тому

    Exactly the kind of talk I needed, Tks...

  • @sergez6172
    @sergez6172 6 років тому

    why thank you! somebody got me a couple and some paint for Christmas, i used to play back from 2005-2009 then i got lost in work and all the other stuff, cant wait to sit down with a cup of tea and paint a few of these bad boys

  • @TheCimbrianBull
    @TheCimbrianBull 7 років тому +2

    7:36 "Shit or get off the lawn!" Preach, uncle Atom, preach! :-)