I've hit a bit of a wall on my other projects. I'll see if I can make a breakthrough on some of them this weekend. But during the week, when I only have a little time after work to paint, I'd rather do something I know I can make progress on. So I decided to start on this Dark Elf from Scale75. I had already prepped the figure while I was waiting for the aide-de-camp to arrive.
I went with a very pale skin, something I've been wanting to experiment with. The skin is Dusky Skin, Dusky Skin Highlight, and Vampiric Skin. I then applied some glazes, but I switched these up a bit. Normally I'd use red in the cheeks and nose, blue on the jaw for stubble, and purple to deepen the shadows. I skipped the stubble, that didn't seem to fit with an elf. The other glazes I shifted more towards blue, so red became a reddish purple (2 parts red, 1 part blue) and the purple became a blueish purple (1 part red, 2 parts blue). The red-purple glaze went on the cheeks, nose, knuckles, elbows. The blue-purple went in the shadows on the face and shadows on the arms and hands. I also used a bit of blue above the eyes and in a couple shadows for a little more variation.
For the clothing I thought an overall dark look would fit an assassin character. The hood is Pure Black, Dusky Skin Shadow, and Dusky Skin. I'm trying to decide if I want to keep the entire figure in that black-grey-white color scheme and just use hints of color through glazing. Otherwise I'll just stick to dark colors (dark brown, dark purple, etc).
For the armor I'm taking a slightly different approach. This time around I'm using inks to build up the shadows and some hints of color. It's definitely a learning process.
Here's a closer look at the face and upper body. It's a little easier to see the color variation from the glazes. I tried to keep them subtle, as it's easy to overpower that light light skin. The colors are a bit more noticeable in person.
I love everything about this one already.
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