You are currently viewing HCRealms.com, The Premier HeroClix Community, as a Guest. If you would like to participate in the community, please Register to join the discussion!
If you are having problems registering to an account, feel free to Contact Us.
Awesome, I'm glad it worked out for you. Also, as Giganto is so light, I'd use a dark/hunter green rather than a black first. Then you can still use black if you feel the need.
I will let him know if it turns out bad no problem he has two.
Thanks for the Great videos, I've been wanting to try it for some time but worried that it was going to be a long/difficult process. May take a spin up to the local hobby shop and acquire some supplies to give my extra hulk a go. Plus some of the figures look so blah, even if I mess up I think I could end up enhancing their look.
I have zero painting experience, but after watching this tutorial I have a feeling I'll be trying this out soon!
Looking for someone to do some painting of a custom sculpt for me. Willing to trade figures, dice or cash. Please PM me if interested. Pictures of some past work would be helpful as I want this to look GREAT!
Please keep posting these! I used these two techniques on my hulk as well and he looks pretty awesome. Thank you!
Honestly, as far as simple techniques go, these are the two most useful and accessible to those with little or no artistic skill. They can be applied to virtually any figure to improve them.
Anything else would be feel like I was making a "look at what I can do and you can't" video. While I have no interest in being a jerk I would consider doing customs for those who want more.
Excellent job. My bud Creed has been doing this for years, and I finally have decided to do so; he showed me his techniques several days ago, but unfortunately being self-employed makes things hard time wise. He acquired three Gigantos and did each one in a different color; I need to convince him to post pics as together they look gorgeous.
You know, there's a method for "dipping" miniatures that some miniature painters use for quickly painting large armies that might work well.
At your local hobby store you can probably find Army Builder Quickshade. You just dunk the mini, wick off the excess, then let it dry. After, you give the mini a quick flat coat and you're done.
Now, with normal minis you'd first lay down all of you base colors - but since that work is done here you could just dip them and go.