this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
23 points (100.0% liked)
Tabletop Miniatures
2202 readers
1 users here now
From D&D to Warhammer and beyond, and including printing, painting and everything else - this is a place to discuss and share everything about tabletop miniatures and terrain.
Stand out threads:
Friends of TabletopMinis:
-
https://ttrpg.network/communities (an instance dedicated to TTRPGs)
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Welcome! Others have posted some great tips so I'll only throw in a few.
As a beginner I'd recommend just using contrast paints for now, particularly if you have access to a to of them at your FLGS. Contrast paints (or speed paints, different brands call them different things) are basically pre-thinned and my experience is that they're a great way to get used to how paint is meant to move on a model and how to fill in spaces. There are a ton of "slapchop" videos on Facebook which is a painting approach that uses speed paints.
Once you're happy with this you can move on to thinning and mixing your own colours, and throwing in stuff like edge highlights.
Also - don't throw away or strip your first mini once it's done! Keep it and compare back to it as you improve.
I'll agree that contrast/speed paints are good jumping on point.
And I say never strip a model. See your progress, enjoy how far you've come.