Hi everyone! A brief update on my most recent works. I've been struck by the Bretonnian vein, but have managed to only paint a couple of characters. I started with a Grail Knight on foot.
The good thing about Bretonnia is that you don't really have to care for actual heraldry (which is in fact way more strict and complex than one could imagine at first). You can mix whatever colours you fancy and it will be ok! (In fact I'm surprised that no one has ever painted Bretonnian Knights in Space Marines colours and heraldry, but that's another story...)
For this one I made this up:
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| Because orange & white look cool. Yup, that's my reasoning |
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| Then you have to paint the big cup thing |
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| Say what you want, that's not a carpenter's cup |
The fun starts when you have to replicate the stripes on the clothes of the little man. After some time I got this:
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| Looks like a permanent warning sign. Which is suitable for a guy with a hammer, I guess |
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| Ready to discuss about cups. Cups are his passion |
Apart from the Grail knight, I thought it was a good opportunity to paint the Sorceress. If I had gone for a warm palette for the warrior, I opted for a cold one for the lady:
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| I was happy with the colour, but it looked too dull and generic |
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| So I thought of adding some trimming and embroidery |
I even tried to make silver threads in the center of the lighter lines, but it really didn't work. The glow killed the effect and made a mere mass of unreadable shapes. Anyway, the final effect, as you'll see in the next pic, added some depth and made it look like an ornate and appropiate dress for a lady.
You can see that I made exactly the same for the mounted Sorceress:
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| Those dresses wer on sale at the store, you know |
They are not exact replicas, but they are close enough, so I'm using these as mounted and standing version of the same character, just in case.
Well, my Bretonnian army was lacking characters, so I have tried to solve it to some extent. Here you can see how they face the enemies of the Realm:
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| I believe this has quite a Warhammer Quest vibe |
BONUS!
Apart
from my Warhammer mumblings, we’ve managed a quick family getaway over
the Easter break and headed off to Burgos, which is pretty feasible from
home, and it's been quite fitting for this medieval mood!
You
know I quite fancy doing this sort of drawings. I keep on taking the
risk of going straight in with ink, one day I'm gonna mess it up...
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| This is supposed to be the Abbey of Las Huelgas |
A late 12th-early 13th Century Abbey, conceived to serve as royal mausoleum and center of political/religious power. I won't bother you with thousands of pics, but please indulge me if I cannot resist to show you the burial of Alfonso VIII of Castile and his wife Eleanor of England (daughter of Henry II and Elaenor of Aquitaine, sister of Richard the Lionheart):
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| Just a nod for you, my dear British fellas |
Alfonso VIII led the battle of Navas de Tolosa, and in the Abbey is kept since then what is believed to be the banner of the Almohad Caliph Al-Nasir:
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| This thing is huge. 3'2 x 2'2 meters |
The Town Museum keeps the sword Tizona, which is traditionally identified as El Cid's weapon (sorry, no pic!), and the Museum of Human Evolution focuses on the archaeological site of Atapuerca, which is quite impressive indeed. No pics allowed on the actual fossiles, but we are talking about 28 separate individuals of Homo heidelbergensis, early Neanderthals, which is like a huge discovery.
The following shots (last ones, I promise) were taken on the town castle, built on the top of the hill and currently under a daring project of renovation works, as a metallic grid is being put in place to show how the original structure was.
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| The entrance. Tiny Suberlings for scale reference purposes |
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| The grid, showing he bulk of the original construction |
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| A better view of the grid |
Well, I'm restraining myself of flooding you with more pics, as I also don't want to distract you from the minis! I hope you enjoy all my mumblings, I'll be bringing more stuff anytime soon!
That orange-and-white combo looks incredible! Incredible work!
ReplyDeleteI find the easiest thing for mimicking real heraldry is to just remember the metallic/colour rule (never place a metallic on a metallic or a colour on a colour) and then remember that the end of the rule is 'except when it rules' (eg the Kingdom of Jerusalem which is gold on white).
Also this makes using transfers very easy because most transfers are white (ie metallic) or a simple colour (red or black usually). But that's because I can't freehand worth a damn.
Thank you! And you are totally right, of course, the rule of cool is the most important thing LOL
DeleteWow that is some great heraldry, it's freeing isn't it not having to match actual historical rules right? Also I love that dress pattern, very simple but from a distance adds so much texture. Plus I loved the travel photos haha.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm glad they look reasonably believable at a distance. I could have put more work on the Sorceress dress, but I hope it works as it is!
DeleteExcellent work on the figures and heraldic scheme. I enjoyed your holiday photos also.
ReplyDeleteAlan Tradgardland
Thank you very much! The medieval mood is contagious, I could start my (so long time forgotten) historical project right now. Ah, so many things to do!
DeleteWoow! Shield looks amazing 👏
ReplyDeleteThank you! I think it works for a Grail knight, I cannot ask for more!
DeleteThat's a great looking Grail Knight, and well done with the shield.
ReplyDeleteThe sorceress is great too, the texture you added to the dress really brings it to life. That sort of thing is something I really struggle with.
Looks like you had a fun holiday too, the tomb reminds me of one of my favourite records from my youth, 'Music from the Court of Ferdinand and Isobella', probably rather obscure.
And reconstructing the original shape of buildings, genius.
Thank you! Glad you like it all, much appreciated! Now I feel the itch to look for that record...
DeleteIf it helps, it's by David Munrow and the Early Music Consort. You might find it on YouTube?
DeleteI've been hearing a little bit of it, didn't know of this and I've found it quite interesting, thanks for the recommendation!
DeleteAwesome Fantasy heraldry Suber, and your right about trying to follow traditional it's a nightmare ! LOL The dresses look very refined for a distinguished lady. Thanks for sharing the vacation pictures, very inspiring and good reference points.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I had a real good time painting them, the Easter break has just been the icing on the cake to help me finish it all!
DeleteAwesome painting Suber. Wonderful work on the knight and the Sorcerer.
ReplyDeleteLove the photos, please feel free to add as many as you want as often these are places we will never get to see ourselves, so I am sure many of us will be very happy to come along with you!
A fantastic drawing of the abbey. I can imagine it being an illustration in a D&D book.
Thank you very much! I'll make sure I take (and post) more pics of the like :D
DeleteI enjoy making these drawings, I miss the times when I used to practise more and could afford to draw, paint, make comics and stuff. Ahhhh (sigh!)
That grail shield is fantastic work, as are the figures.
ReplyDeleteBill.
Thank you! I hope they look classic enough, hehe!
DeleteThese are really good! The shield for the knight is particularly excellent. (I once painted space marines like Bretonnians. Does that count?) I've got that damsel model and will be painting her sometime, but first I'm going to try the more complex version from the second codex (it's the same basic model but with more clutter, which spoils it somewhat). I've very jealous that you've got the mounted sorceress!
ReplyDeleteAnd the bonus pictures are good too. Always interesting to see some real-world inspiration. You clearly had a good day out.
Thank you! Well, your own Bretonnians have been quite an inspiration, of course, can't wait to see more!
DeleteBoth are excellent.
ReplyDeleteThe shield is great and yes, very much not a carpenters cup.
:D
The extra lines on the dress to elevate the style even more, that was a good call.
Even better than all of that is your sketch, that is great work!!
Thank you so much! I used to draw more some time ago, but now I hardly find a moment to do this kind of sketches. Anyway, I keep enjoying it, so I'm happy :)
DeleteI laughed out loud at my work desk at "Cups are his passion"! XD
ReplyDeleteAs the actual hobby work - really like the patterns and colour choices on these. That Knight stands out nicely as a hero or leader and the sorceress obviously puts more into her arcane studies than she does typical ostentations where her attire is concerned. No need for laces and bows on the battlefield!
Still impressed at your ink work too mate. You should give yourself more credit. My version would look like garbage for sure.
Haha, thank you very much! I have a soft spot for medieval knights and stuff, and Bretonnia gives me enough freedom to do weird stuff :D
DeleteI'd love to draw more. Not that I have any aspirations, of course, but I find it enormously relaxing. Agh, I need to finish so many projects and then draw again! XD
Excellent miniatures well painted, which are always a delight to see!
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your sketch and vacation photos too... flood us away with more if you like!
Thank you very much! Haha, duly noted, I'll be sure to do it on my next trip!! :D
DeleteLovely Bretonnian characters, I dont take heraldry too seriously even doing historicals! Great photos, we could do with more!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thank you very much! Ohh, I'll make sure to post more travel pics then! Thanks!
DeleteAwesome freehanding on that shield mate - it's the sort of thing that can really elevate a model, and you've certainly done that here! I also like the patterning you've added to the sorceresses' dress. As you say, it really adds to the finished figure without being distracting. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you! I really think that small details of this kind use to pay off, as they add much more to a model than it really seems!
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