How to paint Lizardmen - Part 2
Uploader Comments (Toxicrafa)
All Comments (12)
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Khopesh is correct: also 'sickle-sword' (not a sickle, that is a tool, not a weapon really) and stems from the Egyptian times, where it was a regular one-handed army weapon - very multipurpose. Egyptian rulers often had an unsharpened version with a longer handle as a symbol of power. It dates back to Assyrian and even Sumer times (3000 BC) and in it's original form it had a longer handle for two-handed use.
The protective thing before his crotch :) is a loincloth :)
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Love the video. Using the wash directly on the skins base coat after separating off the scales is brilliant. I'm thinking of using various shades of light-bright greens and yellows, to vary the underlying tone of the skins, and then use the same blue for the scales, before the wash, to bring them all back together again. A nice and easy way to individualize them.
Great stuff, love the magnifying glass. Keep it up!
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@Toxicrafa That may have been a model out of a previous starter set. lizardmean and bretonia. Nice trick with thw magnify glass....
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Good Good Good.. Came out awesome.. GREAT Tutorial. Nothing rushed. showed what you were doing very well. (Know that's not easy with that magnifying glass and filming while painting)
BTW. I think that weapons is called a Kopesh
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would love to see some more how to paint vids subbed
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@Toxicrafa ok, I almost thought I missed something :D
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@Asken96 hehe, see :D
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awesome
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@Asken96 I know, they look way different. I just checked GW's hole lizmen range and there was no mini matching on this desingn
where did you get this lizmen? is this an older version?
Phile700 10 months ago
@Phile700 Yes they are different now. The one I used on the video are an old version, I bought a bunch on ebay for cheap :)
Always looking for cheap minis on ebay is good for practicing.
Toxicrafa 10 months ago