Looks great! I just discovered this too a couple weeks ago (albeit using Army Painter speed paints). I always struggled with brush stroke lines with speed pains but the air brush made great work.
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I have started painting my test tyranids from Leviathan and I'm going with a similar scheme, at least for the skin portion. Do you get much from the zenithal priming that the contrast doesn't do already or is it to double down on the contrast effect?
On a recent project, I simply primed white, and some hard to reach parts of the model remained white, which I really disliked, because I spent a lot of time teaching these unpainted parts.
Zenithal makes the model white, while still leaving the hard to reach parts black, which registers to the eye as shadow and gives, in my opinion, a better result with less efforts. Contrast also makes the transition between white and black (light and shadow) really smooth and natural, even on brighter colours.
Thats actually pretty nice!
That looks awesome!
Dang that looks good! I love contrast in general, really made painting a lot more fun for me
How did it flow? Did you use any thinner or flow improver?
The flow was great with simply 20% thinner and no flow improver (I was afraid it would break the surface tension and ruin the contrast effect).
The fact that I did the entirety of leviathan in one batch probably helped limit the drying time in the airbrush, and prevented clogging the airbrush.
Man, this sounds great. Would you mind sharing how you did the entire process?
All 4 steps done with an airbrush: Prime Vallejo Black, then Zenithal Vallejo Grey, then one spray directly from above with Army painted white (any white should do). Finally, I just sprayed Skeleton Horde until it started pooling, at which point I stopped to avoid over spraying.
That's great to hear. I have some sculpts printing and am inspired to give this a try now. Thank you!
That looks really good, I'm definitely going to give this a shot!
Yeah, it actually works kinda like a glaze if you airbrush a thin layer, or you can do like you did, spray a bit thicker and it'll still do the contrast effect. But that doesn't work too well with some colors