I can remember exactly when I became a devotee of Nurgle. It was in 3rd Year Senior (Year 9 these days), in the classroom before school. A mate had brought in a copy of the Realm of Chaos Lost and the Damned book (not the more recent Horus Heresy novel of the same name. Is nothing sacred?) and a few of us were discussing the merits of the various Chaos Gods. I was immediately taken by the colours, the variety and the sheer joy felt by Nurgle’s followers, as well as the fact that they were so gross. Happy but Gross. It’s a coincidence that was around the same time I started getting really spotty.
That was it. From
then on anything that was a bit Chaosy was painted predominantly in greens, as
Nurgle armour should be. Then I started
to convert and sculpt and as time went on more buboes, tentacles and goo were
added to the mix… If it looked like it
could join Nurgle, it did. Which too
many years later eventually led to this character. The Wormlord.
By this point I had figured out sculpting with Green Stuff and always keeping the tools wet (I use stainless steel dentists’ tools purchased from eBay). I’m still not great at sculpting large complicated areas, I tend to layer each muscle / armour piece / area of clothing / etc. at a time, leave it to set, them move to the next. Fortunately there are always more spots to add while waiting!
I do a lot of research for my models – the colours, appearance and textures. A walk in the woods with my camera for an Elf or tree, or I Google animals if I’m painting fur or horns. It’s always worth doing your homework before you get started. I’m lucky (or should that be unlucky?) enough that I work in an area that I can sometimes get to see some of the more grotesque things in life, which does help with things like this, but you want them at times to be a bit stylized, not toooo realistic. It’s supposed to be Fantasy after all.
This model was given a straight black undercoat and painted with Citadel and Model Colour / Vallejo paints. I tend to use Citadel for the colourful areas such as armour and clothing as well as the metals, while I use Vallejos for the more natural colours. Also a combination of both for glazes and washes.
I love Nurglings. They are one of the best things in the Warhammer World. Each one tells a little story of its own, and they are small enough to be able to add one or two to a base and have them interact with their surroundings. You shouldn’t spot them at first as the natural colours blend in with the base a bit – the Character himself should be catching your eye... but then on further examination you can make them out. Look at them, up to their mischief!
The long drip of goo coming out of the big worm was stretched clear plastic built up with glue, similar to the Lictor all those years before. There is further stretched goo around the model (mostly on the worms) created with UHU glue left to dry for a bit before being pulled into shape between different areas. If you time it right it will still be sticky and will stick to the next area. These are done before the model is matt varnished, but are given a couple of layers of gloss varnish to bring back the shine and add some strength.
The base is a bit of wood chipping, shaped, with a mix of fine sand and glue over some areas (and plenty over the ‘supports’ so they don’t look like plastic tubing). I painted the Champion, Nurglings and worms separate from the base then glued them in place.
I really like this model, especially the worms. It was entered into one Golden Demon competition but didn’t even make the first cut. Maybe too ‘wormy’ for the new Age of Sigmar…?
Thanks for reading... thoughts, tips, questions and comments are welcomed :)
P.S. I do get requests for commissions. Sadly I don't paint enough or fast enough to make this viable. I can however thoroughly recommend Average Joe's Painting Studio. A nice enough guy, and a good painter ;)
Find him here: https://www.facebook.com/AverageJoesStudio/
Brilliant work, and I enjoyed reading the thoughts behind it all.
ReplyDeleteThank you, much appreciated :)
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