Have to admit I was wondering “Where is he going with this?” I tend to favor a richer natural wood color and the blue grey undertone of the Warp fiend grey really had me wondering. But after the shading and dry brush absolutely a great worn wood look. If your going for the narrative feel of the eight points this is spot on. A tip of the brush to you sir for a job well done!
Thanks for watching the video and taking a minute to comment, and the encouragement is really appreciated. I didn't know if it was going to work in the first place either. Gut feeling paid off.
Bookmarks 4 me 0:50 prime skele brown 1:05 Warpfiend grey blueish grey 2:20 Layer of Warp grey whike wet ..... 3:08 layer ratling flesh wet blend ware and tare 6:10 shade talk. Adrex ( also camoshade for moss) 9:20 Trimonix stone dry brush
Hiya I'm currently building some scaffolding and walk ways using your sprue method, although I've not decided on a paint scheme yet. Just wondering what you'd recommend now you've tried a light method with dark dry brush finnish and a grey one with a lighter dry brushing. Perhaps you have any tips or you've developed another recipe you wouldn't mind sharing? thanks very much
Glad you enjoyed it! I did wet my brush a bit before dipping in the pot, but for terrain I don't generally thin my paint. I do move the paint around a lot to keep it from clogging detail, but for speed sake I try and cover terrain in one pass. For painting models i'm more likely to thin paint on a wet palette - but not always. Thanks again for watching.
Hey Alcovitch, thanks for watching the video, sorry the grey didn't strike your fancy. Your recipe sounds great and I'd love to try it sometime. Mine is definitely not natural wood color, more of the worn and weathered type you might find on a boat dock or dried out in the desert.
Have to admit I was wondering “Where is he going with this?” I tend to favor a richer natural wood color and the blue grey undertone of the Warp fiend grey really had me wondering. But after the shading and dry brush absolutely a great worn wood look. If your going for the narrative feel of the eight points this is spot on. A tip of the brush to you sir for a job well done!
Thanks for watching the video and taking a minute to comment, and the encouragement is really appreciated. I didn't know if it was going to work in the first place either. Gut feeling paid off.
Best wood tutorial I have ever seen.
Great video, I love the weathered look and those sprue ladders are impressive! Thanks.
Outstanding work sir! Thank you for sharing and please stay safe.
Rough wet blending as you go is an interesting alternative to the usual coat one color then dry brush. I like it
Amazing and simple tutorial bro! Fantastic job! Totally gonna try this for the wood on my Skaven constructs.
Fantastic. Those rats would absolutely steel all this wood and use it for wheels and scaffolding.
That's a perfect application. Share some pics when you have a chance.
Bookmarks 4 me
0:50 prime skele brown
1:05 Warpfiend grey blueish grey
2:20 Layer of Warp grey whike wet .....
3:08 layer ratling flesh wet blend ware and tare
6:10 shade talk. Adrex ( also camoshade for moss)
9:20 Trimonix stone dry brush
Great Vid -- amazing idea on how to make the wood look weathered.
Glad you enjoyed it! And thanks for the encouragement!
Love this technique, thanks!
Try and athonian camo shade wash as well I tend to use that when I am washing grey wood
A very good tutorial for a noob like me 👍😎🇦🇺
Hiya I'm currently building some scaffolding and walk ways using your sprue method, although I've not decided on a paint scheme yet. Just wondering what you'd recommend now you've tried a light method with dark dry brush finnish and a grey one with a lighter dry brushing. Perhaps you have any tips or you've developed another recipe you wouldn't mind sharing? thanks very much
@marquessminiatures moss effect on this terrain
Thanks for the tutorial mate, very nice! btw, you don't thin your paints with water (as you were using them straight from the pot)?
Glad you enjoyed it! I did wet my brush a bit before dipping in the pot, but for terrain I don't generally thin my paint. I do move the paint around a lot to keep it from clogging detail, but for speed sake I try and cover terrain in one pass. For painting models i'm more likely to thin paint on a wet palette - but not always. Thanks again for watching.
Nice looking weathered wood, great tutorial :)
Thanks for saying as much! I'm enjoying it on my tables.
Dryad Bark (or Rinox Hide) > Agrax shade > Sylvaneth Bark dry brush> Tyrant Skull Dry brush. More natural wood color. Not a fan of the grey honestly.
Hey Alcovitch, thanks for watching the video, sorry the grey didn't strike your fancy. Your recipe sounds great and I'd love to try it sometime. Mine is definitely not natural wood color, more of the worn and weathered type you might find on a boat dock or dried out in the desert.
Great tutorial, but man, you really need to work on your pace. I mean, 17 minutes for a 3 steps tutorial?
Anyway, as said great tutorial, thank you.