Painting your Infinity Teutonic Knight… A Black Tabard
November 9, 2012 by elromanozo
For some website features, you will need a FREE account and for some others, you will need to join the Cult of Games.
Or if you have already joined the Cult of Games Log in now
What difference will having a FREE account make?
Setting up a Free account with OnTableTop unlocks a load of additional features and content (see below). You can then get involved with our Tabletop Gaming community, we are very helpful and keen to hear what you have to say. So Join Us Now!
Free Account Includes
- Creating your own project blogs.
- Rating and reviewing games using our innovative system.
- Commenting and ability to upvote.
- Posting in the forums.
- Unlocking of Achivments and collectin hobby xp
- Ability to add places like clubs and stores to our gaming database.
- Follow games, recommend games, use wishlist and mark what games you own.
- You will be able to add friends to your account.
What's the Cult of Games?
Once you have made a free account you can support the community by joing the Cult of Games. Joining the Cult allows you to use even more parts of the site and access to extra content. Check out some of the extra features below.
Cult of Games Membership Includes
- Reduced ads, for a better browsing experience (feature can be turned on or off in your profile).
- Access to The Cult of Games XLBS Sunday Show.
- Extra hobby videos about painting, terrain building etc.
- Exclusive interviews with the best game designers etc.
- Behind the scenes studio VLogs.
- Access to our live stream archives.
- Early access to our event tickets.
- Access to the CoG Greenroom.
- Access to the CoG Chamber of Commerce.
- Access the CoG Bazarr Trading Forum.
- Create and Edit Records for Games, Companies and Professionals.
Very nice tutorial. I’ll have to give these steps a shot.
I’m glad you liked it.
It’s easy to do black… You just have to think about which colours to darken.
More tutorials on this are on the way. Stay tuned !
Hey there Romain, a bunch of great infinity tutorials. Small question: Quen you go a bit heavy on the paint (Not diluted enough to make those uniform coats) how do you fix it once it is dried? Do you have to remove it and start from scratch? I got a few experimental miniatures I did way back when I was trying to get the hang of painting (Before you backstage tutorials as well) and now I look at them and feel quite a bit sorry. I started painting my Infinity army to a decent standard for a begginer but I… Read more »
Ah, to strip or not to strip… If it’s just for a quickie, you don’t necessarily need to… But you’ll have to if you want to touch all the nooks and crannies. I can see how this could be misconstrued… Let me explain further : If you made a single mistake on a miniature (something only a few millimeters large, or a drowned detail…) but you’re proud of the rest, try using an exacto knife or even a small pointy file to remove that bit of the paint-job (again, a minute area, no more than three or four millimeters wide).… Read more »
Thanks, it does help. I’ll look at that method. Before reading your reply I even kind of did what you suggested (But using my fingernails instead of a blade, and it actually removed the clogged paint spot without affecting the miniature details). To be more precise this is Dawnlord Vyros, and I kind of used a gray paint that got too thick in some spots, on some other places there weren’t so many problems. I don’t think I’ll have to strip it. I’m looking foward to your next tutorials.
Cool !
Very nice miniature… Glad I could help !