Tuesday 14 August 2018

Carab Culln the Risen


I'm beginning to run out of ideas for basing my Scorpions.  There's only so many prostrated Genestealer poses you can do before it all starts to look a bit samey.  I resolved to do something a bit different this time and came up with the notion of 'Deep Fried Nids'.


Culln himself is equipped with a rather splendid pair of chest mounted heavy flamers (much better than Magnus nipples imho) and I was pleased with my first attempt at muzzle burn.  I followed the online tutorial kindly provided by The Blessed Duncan, using yellow/purple/blue washes but I thinned mine with airbrush/glazing medium to make it a bit shinier and applied two thin coats. Therefore, it seemed natural that I should pose this behemoth standing over the crispy remains of some unfortunate gribblies.  Plus, I figured it would be extremely easy to paint them.  A bit of grey drybrushing over the black primer and thats it!  Best colour scheme ever!


Naturally, I went off at a complete tangent and started dicking around.  My chosen victims (a Genestealer and a Hormagaunt) were way too fat and juicy to look like they had just been incinerated by a pressurised jet of super heated promethium.  So I had to carefully pare down the limbs and drill the rib cages in order to make them more skeletal.  Technically, this might not be the correct way to make Tyranids appear melted.  They are encased in some sort of weird exoskeleton which probably means they cook from the inside and the flames would not necessarily melt flesh from bone. Or maybe thats just the chitin (pronounced 'Ky-Tin' folks.  Don't say it wrong or your kids will take the piss out of you forever).  Maybe its just like chitin armour and they have endoskeletons too.  


So I'm going for suspension of disbelief rather than realism.  Realistic Tyranids would probably be more microscopic than gargantuan anyway.  In fact, they probably wouldn't even be vertebrates.  Dispersing a hyper-acidic flesh eating disease that just floats around in the atmosphere has got to be more efficient if you are trying to devour all planetary life. It melts the shit out of everything which then drains into the sea and you simply hoover up the oceans and lakes with half a dozen capilliary towers.  Surely this is much better than evolving bizarre strains of six-legged dinosaurs which have to gambol across the table and eat you?  Not as much fun, admittedly. But I digress and this is 40k dammit!  I can do what I like!


Anyhoo, the skinnier nids looked quite nice on the base but when I painted them the effect was less than pleasing.  They looked exactly like what they were; unfinished black primed models with a hasty drybrush applied.  So I washed everything in black and added the highlights a bit more carefully this time but that still didn't look much different.  I then attempted a bit of 'pontillism' around the edges to try and give the effect of the grass still burning where the promethium splash had landed.  That was ok but the models themselves were boring so I applied the same technique in the crevices.  Lashings of red glaze seemed like a good idea too.  It still didn't look right but it did look cool (to me, at least) so I left it at that. 


Painting Carab himself was not very exciting really.  I used the same techniques that I've used on all my other vehicles/walkers.  Plus he was broken down into sub assemblies (hilariously, I glued the top torso panel in place before the head which subsequently wouldn't fit through the gap in the gorget.  That was a tense few minutes with a pair of tissue-wrapped pliers, I can tell you).   I did change things up a bit with a bronze effect on some of the decorative trim and that was fine but I still can't get it to look like Jordan's.  Culln is a very detailed model and it took a while.  The more I painted, the more I realised how bloody good those Forgeworld painters are.   


I'll probably just stick stealer skulls on the rest of my bases for this army.  With only 6 weeks to go before Fields of Blood I need to crank out more models at an increased pace.  Taking into account Hofstadter's Law (which doesn't really matter because Hofstadter's Law already takes into account Hofstadter's Law) and my natural inclination towards indolence, its going to be tight.


I just realised that the presence of Genestealer skulls in the Citadel miniatures range indicates the existence of an endoskeleton doesn't it?  Come to think of it, Old One Eye's skull is clearly visible too with half his face ripped off.


16 comments:

  1. Looks good! The burning coals effect on the Nids and the grass under them actually comes through pretty well, to my eye.

    His weapon loadout is pretty epic, too. Like he looked at the rest of the Dreads in the Chapter Armoury and just went "OK, that's cute. Now hold my Space Beer and watch this!"

    I'm pretty sure there's also been art showing internal bones in other parts of Nids, too. And yeah, the whole concept of the Nids is incredibly inefficient and makes no sense from any even remotely realistic viewpoint, but giant gribbly space dinosaur bug things that are coming to eat everything are cool, so I play them anyhow :D

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    1. Thanks Westrider. Yeah, the dreadnought fist/claw is called the Tarsus Scorpii and 'Death-Hold' is one of the most cinematic rules I've ever had the pleasure of viewing. I agree that we shouldn't worry too much about Tyranid physiology and all just make screeching noises at the gaming table instead.

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  2. That looks fantastic, man! I love it!

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  3. Done it again, super smooth blues! Great job on the frittata Nids.

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    1. yeah, I may have gone a bit too blue this time (the mechanicus grey is supposed to show through a bit) but I'm happy with it. I'm glad you like my side order of deep fried nid too.

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  4. So Pretty, cant wait to see it for reals. And you did a good job of the charcoal chicken I mean roasted genestealers.

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    1. Well you better not blink at a tournament! He will undoubtedly go down faster than Sonny Liston in his games and get put back in the box.

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  5. You don't feel like painting my Gates of Antares armies do you? You obviously have way too much time on your hands.

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    1. I'm pretty sure that my mountain of unpainted plastic/resin/metal is just as big as yours, Rob. Or maybe not. You've been at this longer than me.

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  6. I've recently started rebuying all of the Grenadier I got rid of 20 years ago. But luckily as I'm mostly playing Dragon Rampant they're all pretty much usable. :-)

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  7. Hey chap. Any chance you could tell me the paints you're using for the Red Scorpions? I love the look, and I'm gonna try any copy you (best kind of flattery, right?). I was searching for a chapter, and your blog sorta inspired me.

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    1. Sorry, I didn't notice your comment! Its the Tempestus Scion colour scheme kind of. Prime Mechanicus Grey. Base Thunderhawk blue. Nuln oil recess shade. Fenrisian Grey highlight. Trim is Averland Sunset with Ushabti Bone highlight.

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