Seldon9 Is Painting HeroQuest
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About the Project
A friend asked me to paint up his HeroQuest set. I foolishly said yes.
Related Company: Hasbro
Related Genre: Fantasy
This Project is Completed
In the beginning
A friend of mine bought the new HeroQuest set and a couple of expansions. He’s been 3d printing a board and it looks aces. So I’ve volunteered to paint up his forces and hopefully do something nice.
Preparation
The models’ details are quite soft but I find them characterful. However a lot of them arrived with bent weapons and even bent bases in some cases. The plastic packaging has a kind of clip to hold them in place which appears to work if the models are put back correctly. However it’s not obvious how you clip them in and I think if you let friends put them back they may not be fitted correctly. Fortunately holding them in hot water saw them revert to their proper form or close to it.
The barbarian had a gap in his arm that needed filling but by and large I’ve been able to ignore more other defects. Mold lines are very much in evidence and removed where found.
Bases
I thought the bases might not fit back in the packaging if I added stuff to them. But I didn’t want to leave them blank. So I painted in flagstones.
I used Pro Acryl black, white and dark neutral grey. Any three black,white and greys would do. I like Pro Acryl’s coverage.
I painted the base grey then use black to draw in lines delineating flagstones.After that I mixed intermediate tones and wet blended them from light to dark in the same direction on each flagstone. Finally I added catchlights.
Goblins
The goblins most notable feature are their oversized heads and playfully evil expressions. So I put most effort into their skintones and kept hte other parts simple.
I began by preshading the figures. Then I ran with contrast paints:
– Contrast Magos purple in the shadows.
– Contrast Lyanden Yellow over the skin areas.
– Athonian camo shade in the recesses.
– Minitaire ghost tint green over all the skin.
– Contrast Blood Angels red thinned and applied to the tips of the noses.
After that I used simple base coats on the other parts of the figures.
Orcs
I used the same skin tone recipe as that used on the goblins. The orcs had more pronounced armour which I tried to differentiate a little by mixing some blue in in with the Vallejo’s burnt iron metallic. The cooler metallic tone should contrast with the warmer red loin cloth and skin.
Skeletons
Pretty simple scheme for the skellys. Preshade to begin with. I used green – Biel tan wash – and brown – snakebite leather contrast – tones on the scythe shafts to give them an older look. Other parts were basecoated and given muted tones.
I tried to distinguish the scythe blades by giving them rusted tones using browns and oranges over a metallic steel basecoat.
Mummies and Zombies
Given the amount of green in the units painted so far I decided to give the undead blue skin tones. I shaded the the preshade using thinned coats of Scale Color SC-51 Mediterranean Blue and shaded them with a purple oil wash.
The zombies weapons were treated with oranges and browns to give them a rusted look.
Abominations
Weird fish men! I can’t recall what my original plan for them was but they gained a lot of colours inbetween.
The purple armour was Vallejo steel metallic mixed with purple ink and edge highlighted with silver.
The skintone was orignally a light blue then washed with a darker green. I’m afraid I lost my pic of the colours. I went back over the lighter colours with white and used Scale Colour fluorescents to really make them pop. On























































