I'm sharing my award winning (:D) 5 step method of painting Bloodletters. I only use basic techniques and the end result looks pretty good.
Introduction / rant (skip this to go straight to the painting part)
I was looking through some painting videos on miniwargaming (more specifically, a show called Quick Tips) and I was happy to notice that there are several takes on painting Warhammer Daemon models. In fact, there are several for painting Bloodletters:
- Quick Tip: Daemon Flesh (BloodLetter)
- Quick Tip: Daemon Flesh (bloodletter alt)
- Quick Tip Daemon Flesh (bloodletter black)
- Quick Tip: Daemon Flesh (bloodletter fun)
Go ahead and watch them if you want/can. They're great as idea providers. However, I wouldn't paint my Bloodletters like that. In fact, I feel that the above videos may apply to you, if you:
- own a large selection of paints;
- are already an accomplished painter;
- have a large amount of time;
- don't mind that your models look kind of "uncanonical".
None of the above apply to me (otherwise I wouldn't be writing this rant). I own a reasonable selection of paints (about 25 colors, including a single kind of wash), but nothing to compare to what Kris uses in the videos (about 5 shades of red, for starters). I have mastered the basic techniques (or so I like to think), but I wouldn't call myself a pro painter. Neither do I want to spend a large period of time per model, preferring to get them on the tabletop in a reasonable amount of time. Also, I want my models to look as canonical as possible. So there's that.
If you think you can relate to the above, read on.
If you think you can relate to the above, read on.
How to paint Bloodletters (quickly & for beginners)
Paints used (Vallejo range)
- Gory Red
- Black
- Chain Mail
- Bright Bronze
- Stonewall Grey
- White Primer
- Black Wash
- Scorpy Green, Sick Green, Ultra Marine Blue (small quantities)
Step 0. Extract your models from the sprues and glue them together. Not detailed here.
Step 1. Prime your models in white
A white primer is important, since I'm doing bright colors here. Of course black would also work, but it would require several coats of red to achieve the same brightness. That's basically a waste of time and paint.
Bloodletters primed with the graffiti spray
Step 2a. Basecoat the skin
A single coat of slightly watered down red paint will suffice here. This will save both time and paint, and will look just right thanks to the white primer underneath.
Menacing enough?
Note. In a less demanding environment, these models are tabletop-ready! Indeed, they already look a lot better than unpainted ones, and I have played some games like that - check out the battle reports.
Step 2b. Basecoat the rest of the model
Grey for the claws on the feet. Bronze on the sword hilts. Black on the sword blades, tattoos and base. Bone white or white on the horns, teeth and other boney protrusions on the body. Various colors on the tongues.
Notes.
Since bronze is usually a weak paint, give it a coat of silver/gunmetal first, then cover it up with bronze.You can do a molten effect on the sword blade or whatnot, but I promised quick and easy solutions, so we're skipping that.
Leave the base for last, as you will most likely have paint drip on it while painting.
White works just as well on horns. I've used that for the first generation of models painted.
I used tongue color to tell the different Bloodletter squads apart. This really helps when two 20-man hordes get into the same melee. Colors used so far: neon green and blue-green. I'll do my last two squads with blue and violet.
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