I love Citadel paints, but like everyone, i hate their pots.
I have been tempted to get some of the McFarlane figures, I wish he would do some Sigmar stuff though.
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I love Citadel paints, but like everyone, i hate their pots.
I have been tempted to get some of the McFarlane figures, I wish he would do some Sigmar stuff though.
I’m just joining the hobby now and am probably going to start painting this week. When you say you like the paint but not the pot does that mean something about the design of the plastic container?
Yes. Almost every other container in the industry is a dropper bottle.
Ok and having not cracked mine open yet, I’m trying to visualize the challenge here.
Is it that we are often thinning the paints on a pallet and not dipping brushes in pots, so control of a small dot of paint on a pallet is way easier with a dropper bottle right?
And citadel paints tip over. Getting paint out of a citadel pot is more difficult to get a consistent amount out onto the palette. You also never want to get paint into the ferrule of the brush (the metal bit that connects the bristles to the handle) and that is much more difficult to do when you are blindly dipping into a pot.
This is all super helpful for me thank you!
One trick I see done a lot (I own an LGS btw) is The Army Painter sells a pack of empty dropper bottles. People will put their citadel paints into those.
https://us.thearmypainter.com/products/paint-mixing-empty-bottles
That first pose is super cool! I love the scuffed and worn look of the power armor too, how do you do that?
Thank you! After applying the base mephiston red coat, I dipped a bit of leadbelcher silver on my brush and dabbed it along several edges and large surfaces to give that chipped paint look. After that, I attacked my figure with an xacto knife to give it even more damage and reveal the black primer underneath.