Continuing on with the bio-ship construction, we've got paint on the field - paint which illustrates why you have to let these ships dry before you paint them - especially if you stick extra doo-dads into the foam.
Whoops.
Painted too soon. Didn't put foam on top of the cupolas to hold them down. Shame on me. We can fix this - we have the technology, but man, what a hassle.Snot fighters! |
I may have hurried to apply the green paint, just to keep the neighbors from wondering what the heck that crazy Warren was doing this time.
I like the two tone color scheme. And I know what you mean about the neighbors - I tend to paint my stuff on boards which I then pick up and hide away in my shed to finish drying.
ReplyDeleteLOL @ turds part. That was what made me commenting.
ReplyDeleteLooking at the entire process I'd have painted those fleshtone, dippedd into a light chestnut ink or wash and then very thinned red in random places along with purple here and there.
Giant space ships made of meat, disgusting !
BTW looking at your approach, I'g go with a bit of texture (white glue and sand at some places focusing on the brown part) and splattering paint into the green one.
You know; take an ols toothbrush, dip it into yellowish (bright) green paint, then face it to your ship, scratch the toothbrush and you'll get you green splattered with a second shade of green (evoking fungus).