In today's video I want to show you a quick and easy way to paint a wonderful
green scheme for your orcs goblins or maybe the new Gloomspite Gitz here I
have a small Gretchen I will use in my orcs kill team that I crime with Vallejo
German Panzer Grey you can also go black but stay really dark this undercoat will
help you shape the shadows on the mini I wanted this color scheme to be
dead simple so we will only be using three colors today from GW Abaddon black
Moot green and flash gitz yellow you can see I have a drop of each on my palette
so without any further ado let's start blocking in the shadow color grab some
black and add a small amount of Moot green this will be the color of your
deeper shadows so feel free to go as dark or as light as you want the darker
the more pop you miniature will have when you're done when you get the proper
color just apply a uniform coat on all the skin part the color still doesn't
show on the camera but bear with me you will be stunned by the results
I will base coat the mini and I will come back for the next step
as you can see the green barely shows on cam but don't worry we are going to put
some real green on that skin right now so grab some more Moot green and mix it
in with the base color dilute to a thick glaze with some flow improver and we are
looking for a milky consistency here and then start highlighting the top part of
the muscles where the light is supposed to hit the model a hint of green starts
showing on the miniature but I probably could have gone a step further with a
Moot green you see you want to stay close to the base color to have smooth color
transitions like I did here but goblins are generally pretty small so you can
ignore this and go directly a couple values brighter
of course the more steps it takes you to reach the perfect green the more
stunning the final result this scheme is a trade-off between quality and quantity
you can adjust it to get one or the other
when you're done highlighting with the green all the raised areas let's move on
to the next green layer this time you want to hit all the same areas but
progressively covering less surface as you move up in brightness
this means that highlighting would get faster as you move up to brighter colors
I speed up this a bit and we'll catch you later for the next color
here we are with the green blocked in so we now move on to the final highlight we
make a mix from the green we used in the previous step and a tiny bit of flash
gitz yellow you have to pick up the same areas with smaller color patches so
don't need to overthink this step you already have the indications for where
to put the paint so paint by numbers and relax
at this point you have to decide if you want more or less contrast on you mini
if you're happy with the result as it is now then you're done and you can go
painting all the rest of the details if you want the me to pop on the table
top then let's add some more yellow to the mix and give it another round of
highlights we do all the highlighting for the last time and we are done with
the flesh we can afford this kind of color scheme as the minis are really
small so the whole thing is less time-consuming than it may seem at first
glance I think it's worth a try even if you are painting tons of units in assembly line
so here's the finished mini I quickly painted some lazy NMM on the gun and
some evil sunz scarlet on the buttrobe here to show you how the flash looks on
the finished model as I told you my shadow is really dark so this dude looks
really cartoonish but you can gauge yourself and get the color you prefer
for your green skins if you liked this tutorial please like and subscribe so I
can keep making more and don't forget to leave your comments and critiques in the
comment section below so I can keep improving thank you for watching
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