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  • Guest

    #1

    Figure face painting

    Hi with me being new to modelling I need some advice on face painting. I’m planning to use Vallejo acrylic paints but need some direction on paint colours.
    If anyone can help me with what colours to use will be a great help.
  • Guest

    #2
    Hi Kevin

    For what it's worth I did a face-painting guide which you can find under the Figure Building Masterclass section. Not great, but it lists the colours I personally prefer.

    Comment

    • SimonT
      • Apr 2018
      • 2824

      #3
      Hi Kevin

      Vallejo do this flesh set vj flesh but they all look very similar

      I think a more useful set is the AK set AK flesh as it has a greater range from dark to light for shading/higlighting

      Comment

      • Guest

        #4
        Originally posted by Peter Day
        Hi Kevin

        For what it's worth I did a face-painting guide which you can find under the Figure Building Masterclass section. Not great, but it lists the colours I personally prefer.
        Thanks Peter I will have a look.

        Comment

        • Guest

          #5
          Originally posted by SimonT
          Hi Kevin

          Vallejo do this flesh set vj flesh but they all look very similar

          I think a more useful set is the AK set AK flesh as it has a greater range from dark to light for shading/higlighting
          Simon thanks for the information about the two different flesh coloured sets.

          Comment

          • Tim Marlow
            SMF Supporters
            • Apr 2018
            • 18882
            • Tim
            • Somerset UK

            #6
            A more useful Vallejo face set is this one....

            They used to have a face painting primer on the site, but I can’t find it now. There are several excellent figure painters on here, so ask questions and read up on previous work. For basic painting advice Vince Venturella’ and Dana Howl’s YouTube channels are worth a look. Most of all, don’t be scared to push paint around, and have fun!

            Comment

            • Guest

              #7
              Originally posted by Tim Marlow
              A more useful Vallejo face set is this one....
              https:tongue-out3:/acrylicosvallejo....ainting-70119/
              They used to have a face painting primer on the site, but I can’t find it now. There are several excellent figure painters on here, so ask questions and read up on previous work. For basic painting advice Vince Venturella’ and Dana Howl’s YouTube channels are worth a look. Most of all, don’t be scared to push paint around, and have fun!
              Thanks Tim this is a great help. I’m looking forward to painting and having fun.

              Comment

              • Steve Brodie
                SMF Supporters
                • Sep 2014
                • 4652

                #8
                You dont need tons of different colours, and if you buy a paint set, the instructions are a bit misleading that come with them, so dont be dissapointed if what you get doesn't look like the pictures on the guide, I only use three / four colours and then create blends using those ones to get the different shades, lots of painters on here and most have our own way of doing things. YouTube is also very handy. Myself, I use Vallejo Brown sand 70.876 - Base. Basic skin tone 70.815- highlights. Black Red 70.859 - Shadows. They all need to be of a milky consistency, so two to three drops of water mixed in.

                Base Brown sand
                Highlight 1 Brown Sand - Basic Flesh 2:1
                Highlight 2 Brown Sand - Basic Flesh 1:2
                Highlight 3 Basic Flesh
                Shadow 1 Black Red
                Shadow 2 Black Red - Brown Sand 2:1
                Shadow 3 Black Red - Brown sand 1:2

                For a lighter skin Tone, i replace the base colour

                Comment

                • Tim Marlow
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Apr 2018
                  • 18882
                  • Tim
                  • Somerset UK

                  #9
                  interesting Steve, those three colours are in the set link I posted above.....very good advice though.

                  Comment

                  • Steve Brodie
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Sep 2014
                    • 4652

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                    interesting Steve, those three colours are in the set link I posted above.....very good advice though.
                    Yes thats the set i have - couldnt use your link , think you have embedded a tongue in check logo - this one works - http://acrylicosvallejo.com/en/produ...ainting-70119/

                    Comment

                    • MattB71
                      • May 2018
                      • 38

                      #11
                      I bought the Vallejo skin set and it does a good job, but its about how you apply those colours....for me it's all about the blending of the skin tones which i find incredibly difficult, but onwards and upwards!

                      Comment

                      • Tim Marlow
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 18882
                        • Tim
                        • Somerset UK

                        #12
                        Hi Matt
                        There are two ways to do this, wet blending, as practiced by Peter Day, and layering. For wet blending I would speak to Peter. I can’t get it to work, but his results using this technique are fantastic. It’s probably because he’s an artist and I’m an interior decorator by comparison.....
                        Personally I use layering. There are many tutorials on YouTube showing this, but the secret is thinning your paint so that it is translucent and slowly building up the colour transition. A wet palette helps a lot with this approach because you can blend the tones on the palette before adding them to the miniature and previous blends are always available to correct mistakes.

                        Comment

                        • MattB71
                          • May 2018
                          • 38

                          #13
                          Thanks Tim. so layering is what ive been trying, i did stumble across a vid by Vince Venturella the other day on all of these techniques, he makes it look so damn easy too! my transitions from dark to lighter shades are not subtle enough, leaving the skin tones looking somewhat like burnt flesh! . but i keep trying...

                          Comment

                          • Tim Marlow
                            SMF Supporters
                            • Apr 2018
                            • 18882
                            • Tim
                            • Somerset UK

                            #14
                            The biggest improvement I made to my layering technique was unloading the brush before painting. If you’re not aware of this, it means dipping the brush in the paint, using a sheet of paper or the back of you thumb to “unload” the excess paint so that the paint doesn’t just flood out onto the model when you touch it. Gives you much more control in placing your strokes.
                            The last tip on this is to start the stroke on where you want the lightest colour depth and end it where the paint needs to be stronger. For highlights this means start in the shadow and end at the brightest point. The last part of the brush stroke always leaves the most paint, so this disguises it and minimises tide mark effects, leaving more paint where you want more paint.
                            Of course, the most important thing is to practice practice practice, it’s the only thing that really works....

                            Comment

                            • MattB71
                              • May 2018
                              • 38

                              #15
                              im spending fortunes on figure models to practice, practice practice!

                              Comment

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