Friday, January 31, 2020

Bones 4 Miniatures: Orange!


I'm back on the color wheel, and the color for this batch is orange.  These miniatures are all rewards for backing the Reaper Bones 4 Kickstarter.  That's right, I'm trying to use up my existing stock, rather than mail-ordering more unpainted miniatures.


On the left, we have an enormous pig with ginger bristles; I was inspired by Tamworth Pigs.  I tried to simulate the appearance of a ginger pig's bristles with multiple layers of selective dry brushing.

This orangey pig is pulling a cart full of pumpkins and other orange, red, and yellow fruits and vegetables.  I didn't put a base on the cart, because the cart is an inanimate object and it can't attack or dodge; the base is partly intended to indicate the space a character can move around in.

As if that pig wasn't scary enough, that cart is also defended by a bard and her dog.  Bards use arcane magic; it is only fitting that this vibrant performer is wearing the most fiery colors.  I decided to give her olive skin and dark hair to honor the rich and beloved heritage of Mexican mariachi performers, and their marvelous costumes.

I wish Reaper made more bard miniatures.  I've only seen 4 Reaper bard miniatures; 2 were females with stringed instruments, one is a Scottish-themed gnome or halfling with bagpipes, and one is the Pathfinder iconic bard.  Let me tell you that bards are fun to paint.  Drummers were introduced onto the battlefield by the Ottoman Empire, but fifers were brought in with Early Modern warfare; still, with portable instruments, they'd make for cool bards.   I'd like to see an evil spooky goth bard, and bards playing various other instruments.  How about a necromancer bard playing a (modified) skeleton like a xylophone?  Imagine a badass blues harmonica bard, or a cajun banjo bard, or even a space alien theremin bard; even though these instruments are much more modern than the Medieval period.

My wife used to have a wonderful blue heeler dog, and I wish to honor this beloved animal companion by trying to give the bard's dog a red heeler's orangey coloring.  Also known as Australian Cattle Dogs, red and blue heelers are sturdy and muscular, energetic, intelligent, and responsive with an independent streak, protective and easy to groom; which all sound like good qualities to have in an adventuring dog.  Maybe in Australia, they would call it an adventuring 'doggo.'  The model here is clearly some kind of heeler mix, because full heeler ears stand up straight, and this model's ears flap down.


Those heroes have their work cut out for them in the form of these 6 orange-clad goblins.  I've got dozens of these goblins, so I'm painting them in color-coordinated tribes for obvious battlemap and inventory reasons.  Also, they mesh with my color wheel scheduling system.


As if those goblins weren't bad enough, at the far right we have a large Crabman and his dire crab pal, ready to put the pinch on our adventurers and their vegetable cargo.  I don't have an airbrush, so I tried to achieve natural gradations of color through successive washes, selectively applied.  Some people are really good at this--much better than I am.  As with anything which requires practice, my technique is a work in progress.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Bones Miniatures: Commission Time!



Some friends complained that they couldn't find decent miniatures for their D&D characters, and I decided to order and paint some miniatures for them.  They didn't pay me.  I guess I commissioned myself.


A lady friend complained that all the female druid miniatures wore skimpy outfits.  She was playing a club-swinging shield-bashing druid who wasn't running around the woods naked, thank you very much.  Danra the Female Druid seemed to fit the bill, as a lady more like Xena, Warrior Princess than a sky-clad flower child.  Danra is the only mini here cast in metal; I wish Reaper would make more like her.  My friend's favorite color is blue-green.

A gentleman friend told me about his gnome cleric who worshiped the goddess of luck.  His favorite color is blue.  I love gnomes.  These gnome warriors are cast as part of the Reaper Bones 4 Kickstarter.


Love may be grand, but Lovecraft is grander; I therefore could not resist these frog-like Deep Ones.

I suspect I was watching Sweetheart, the Survival Horror retake on The Creature from the Black Lagoon, while painting these Deep Ones.  I recommend it!  Sweetheart was genuinely scary for me, and if you think bulky amphibious man-beasts are too comical to be considered a serious threat, Sweetheart might be a thrilling wake-up call.

Another option is The Shape of Water, a Twilight treatment of The Creature from the Black Lagoon (or so I hear).  Bear in mind that in H P Lovecraft's stories, 'normal' people are often (at least partially) SEDUCED into the creepy amphibious lifestyle of the Deep Ones, which (like a creepy vampiric lifestyle) offers eternal life, albeit in service to dark forces.

If I was going to paint more of these guys, I would make sure my green 'back' colors were more distinct, because most of these guys look like they're the same color green, although these greens all came from separate bottles.  I would also figure out a way to transition the back color to the belly color at the edges; maybe with dry brushing, maybe with a seam of mixed color.  I might also research frog spots & stripe patterns.

I thought this incorporeal lady with the scythe was pretty cool, so I purchased this mini so I could paint it to look a little like Marceline the Vampire Queen, who similarly floats around.  I call her a 'wraith,' but in D&D 'wraiths' don't use weapons, although 'ghosts' can.

The Deep Ones and the female wraith with the scythe are cast as part of the Reaper Bones 3 Kickstarter, but during the Kickstarter campaign they were bundled with large packages I didn't want; so I ordered them because now I can order only the miniatures I want, à la carte.


Finally, we have a Marilith demoness, a Warg-like monster, and a sword-wielding Wraith I found in my Reaper Bones 1 Kickstarter rewards.  Shockingly, I still have most of my Reaper Bones 1 Kickstarter rewards minis left to paint, taking up precious space in my house, and yet (as you can see, above) I went and ordered more miniatures.

Friday, January 10, 2020

Bones 4 Miniatures: Red!


I was hoping to get these guys done before the end of November, but The Holidays happened, and I found myself busier (and less inspired to paint demons & devils) than I expected. 

During the Renaissance period, nobility would wear red clothing dyed with carmine, a deep red pigment derived from kermes and cochineal bugs; red is a liturgical color for Christianity, and the color worn by Roman Catholic Cardinals.  Red is also the color of anger, sin, and the devil.  Here, I draw from both noble/divine and base/diabolical associations. 


For these knights in shining armor, I wanted a deep red color which commanded a sense of authority and noble purpose.  Of course I was reminded of the Crusaders, and the deep red stripes on the American flag.


These goat-headed demons are referred to as "Minitaurs".


These larger devils are from the "Bedeviled" series: including a "Ravager," a "Flayer," and a "Tormentor."

I don't like fighting devils and demons in D&D; as monsters from another dimension, they often have immunities and special qualities that make them frustrating challenges.  In contrast, when you fight a vampire or a dragon; yes, they are formidable opponents, but you usually know where their weak spots are.  And then there were the 1980s anti-D&D witch-hunts, because if kids play a game wherein they slay an evil demon, of course they must be worshipping the devil.  Paradoxically, devils and demons aren't even interesting or fun; unlike imaginative owlbears or gelatinous cubes.  My dislike of devils and demons contributed to my delays in finishing the paint job. 

Reaper Miniatures once posted an image featuring some of their new demon miniatures, with a knight included for scale.  Reaper added captions, with the big demons remarking along the lines: 'hey, lunch must be early today,' whereas the fearless little knight observes: '4 demons against 1 knight?  I LIKE THOSE ODDS!'  That knight's attitude often inspires me, and I hope you will bear those sentiments in mind even if you fear the knights in these photos are mathematically outnumbered.