Warhammer 40k
A community dedicated to the universe of Warhammer 40k, a tabletop setting in the far, distant future.
This is a general community for 40k miniatures, art, lore discussion, and gameplay discussion.
Rules
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Keep it civil. Don’t insult other community members in posts or comments, and don’t make posts designed to insult other community members or parts of the fandom with different opinions.
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Posts must be on-topic.
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No real life politics. That means no political advocacy, and no real life political discussions vaguely dressed up as on-topic posts. If you want to discuss real life politics, you are free to start your own community.
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No memes/low-effort spam/Youtube poops style posts. grimdank is a place for those.
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Posts must be coherent.
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If a post is otherwise allowed but has realistic gore or nudity, please mark it NSFW.
Helpful Links
- 10th Edition Rules
- iOS Warhammer 40k App
- Android Warhammer 40k App
- 3rd party site for running Kill Team games
Related 40K Communities:
!imaginarywarhammer@lemmy.world
Other tabletop hobby communities:
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Have the heels of your hands touching each other. Don't press, don't cramp, but keep them together. Your hands will still be shaky, but they'll shake together.
Also don't start with too many different colours. Get comfortable first, then build on that. I am not good with fine motor skills generally and I am all but patient (ADHD, yay) but painting miniatures can be quite meditative. It took me a while though, and it is important to get the basics straight. A good rule of thumb is three colours plus details, primary (paint most of the armour with this colour, the big plates like legs, torso and backpack), secondary or contrast (paint some minor areas that you want to pop out like helmet or pauldrons with this colour) and tertiary or trim (paint small areas that separate armour parts or decals (like aquilas on vanilla marines' chests) with this colour).
Work on solid base coats and not painting over lines before you go crazy on your pallette.
This is just advice from my own personal experience though and if this is not working for you, that's fine, too. Most important is to do it in ways you are having fun doing.
Three colors sounds reasonable, I'll go for that, thanks!