Thanks Steve and Jim,
I started using oil paints for drybrushing and shading, I'm more of an acrylic user so I'm out of my comfort zone...
I've put the main colors onto the cardboard to drain the oil, mixed the yellow with tiny bit of blue to get the green, then added white to lighten the green and blue/dark brown to darken the green...

The result so far, drybrushed the light tone over the green and painted a few dark spots, then tried to blend them a bit. Also did some shading of the hair,

Did the same on the torso, forgot to mask the white so it got some green tones now, will fix it later with acrylics.

This needs to dry now a while, then I'll try to add a gloss varnish and do some pin washes with panel liner of something...
I definitely like the extra time the oils give, but it's a bit messy with the white spirit and I'm also not the most patient modeler lol...
But I should practice some more on a scrap figure, as I'm worried I'll screw up this one.
Thanks for reading and cheers,
I started using oil paints for drybrushing and shading, I'm more of an acrylic user so I'm out of my comfort zone...
I've put the main colors onto the cardboard to drain the oil, mixed the yellow with tiny bit of blue to get the green, then added white to lighten the green and blue/dark brown to darken the green...

The result so far, drybrushed the light tone over the green and painted a few dark spots, then tried to blend them a bit. Also did some shading of the hair,

Did the same on the torso, forgot to mask the white so it got some green tones now, will fix it later with acrylics.

This needs to dry now a while, then I'll try to add a gloss varnish and do some pin washes with panel liner of something...
I definitely like the extra time the oils give, but it's a bit messy with the white spirit and I'm also not the most patient modeler lol...
But I should practice some more on a scrap figure, as I'm worried I'll screw up this one.
Thanks for reading and cheers,


















