Showing posts with label Teddy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teddy. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Teddy 6: Re-pinning and calling it a day

I looked further into why Teddy would not stand flat.  It was partially due to that Wyrd gave him rounded feet underneath.  That meant he stood more like a Weeble... but one who did fall down.

After re-touching up the dings and slips from the previous session with Teddy, I figured I could make it work by making it look just floating slightly above the pentagram, like he'd just been summoned.  A few shadows around the feet and blackening out the dried green stuff is what I'd need. But...



...I kept picking him up to see what brush would fit in under the insert.  One time I put him down and he just popped out of his pins.  And of course, a little paint came off with him.

Okay so I had clean-up painting and re-pinning work to do. But this time, I was going to make sure Teddy was going to stay in place.  He's a top-heavy mini.  Short-cutting with smaller pins didn't work.  Longer pins were needed. Abondon the floating look - get him as flat to the ground as possible. 

So time to route out the tabs underneath the base.  Say good-bye plastic tabs!  You're a nice idea, but just in the way...


The other thing that had to happen was filing down the excess metal from under the footpads.

This time, Teddy slid in place pretty nicely.

Bent the pins back, glued in place and added some washers to give that extra weight to the bottom.  Also I left one washer a little bumped underneath.  This way I could pick him up from the base during gameplay - without having to put my fingers all over Teddy himself.


Teddy finally looked good. A small voice in my head said, "You know what would really look good? A little bit of drool dripping out of his mouth, like he'd just been conjured up and is just salivating over sinking his teeth into you." And another voice answered, "YOU'RE DONE. Let it go, son."

So I'm calling Teddy done.

A few lessons learned:
  • The original Teddy mini has rounded feet. So once he's cut off the metal tab, there's filing that needs to be done
  • Always pin your minis first. I hesitated because of the weight.  Big mistake.
  • Never drill holes on a prefab inserts before they've been glued 
  • And if you've got a heavy mini where you're going to twist the pins under the base, file out the plastic tabs underneath the base before finalizing
  • White primer, black wash. Perfect combo for lighters colors that "pop"

Teddy 5: Pinning and other nuisances

I'd pickend up some Tamiya Clear Red as I'd read that was the best way to get some gory blood reds... And I really liked the effect that Klatu.org got on his Teddy.   But after going through all this work to get the badge, teeth, and lips right - dumping another set of colors overtop of what I've done made me very nervous.  If it didn't go on right, there was no way for me to fix it with out starting from scratch.

I threw some on some test skeletons (from Reaper's first Bones set), and was not thrilled with the results. Examples I've read from other painters had all these shades that fresh blood has.  Whereas what I did just looked like... paint.  I obviously needed more time to experiment with this style.

I ran the idea past my family. They convinced me that blood coming out of Teddy's mouth was too over the top.  Given my hesitancy, it wasn't hard to convince me.

That meant it was pinning time!  I hadn't yet glued the insert to the base, but I wanted to make sure the holes were in the right spots. So I pre-drilled some holes in the orphanage base and simultaneously the base itself.  (I would later come to regret doing this.) 

I also shaved some more metal off the pads of Teddy's feet to get him to stand flatter, and headed over to my buddy's house for a night of painting. I figured I'd knock the gluing and pinning process in an hour or less and get to finishing my Stitched Together models.

Upon arriving, I picked up my painting bag, it slipped and I cut open my forefinger with my thumbnail. (I still am unclear how I pulled this accident off.) I started getting real blood on the pentagram that was conjuring Teddy.  A little foreboding...


The gluing process didn't go smooth.  I struggled to get the holes in the base lined up with the orphanage insert before the glue dried.  I eventually used a rubber cement which gave me a little time to do the lining up.  When I finally got that I put Teddy in and tried using extra long pins and bending underneath the base to give the mini more stability.  (NOTE: I got this idea from the very informative HobbyGuy / MiniGirl #36 blog, though it looks like this episode has been taken down.)

But I didn't route out the plastic lips under the base like I normally do when I put my washers underneath. So I couldn't get a clear 45° angle to bend the pins. I ended up putting more elbow grease in and pulled the pins put of Teddy completely. And I scratched the paint off some of the boards. And more blood got on the summoning stone.

So I had to pull the pins out, recut them, and superglue them back into Ted.  This also meant that using green epoxy for extra stability was unavoidable at this point. It would be needed just where the pin was coming out of Teddy and under the base.  The end result was Teddy's feet would not hit the floor flatly. He's sort of levitating there above the summoning stone.  At this point, I called it a night.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Teddy 4: First Wash, Detail Clean-up and Badge of Frustration

Almost every miniature I paint has one spot that becomes the bane of my existence.  This miniature's bane will be the "t" and "e" in the word plate.

So I did a brown wash of FolkArt Teddy Bear Brown on key spots.  Did a little Coffee Bean and Van Dyke Brown to get some separation.  Also added this to the claws a little too to give it a more bone look. 

Also decided it was time to get Teddy on some pins before I started doing the detailed work.  I didn't want to do this earlier as Teddy is a heavy mini and needed as much support as possible.  But I couldn't delay it forever.  Otherwise I'd be putting my hands all over key details I might not be able to recreate. This part went smoothly.

Next up - make the plate look a little more like a plate rather than two concentric circles with a face.  I could have gone for the "admiral dinner plate" look. But I decided on a more classic plate reference.  Reaper's Power Palate tool is a god send. I've learned a lot about shading and tones in ways I never could see on my own.

Reaper's suggestion was their Ghost White on one side, Leather White on the other with Pure White for the highligts.  I used an icy blue, FolkArt Dove Grey and Folk Art Titanium White.  I also didn't get rid of the middle blue ring. Since I used glazes, it's there very subtly.  It's still a little too blue for my tastes though.

I gave the outer ring a thin line of pure black for separation.  That's where the trouble started.  The letters started getting in the way a little.  And the "T" in plate was just weird looking.  The cross was too slanted.  And the "E" was missing some definition.

So I fixed it... with the wrong font color.  I used a darker brown (Coffee Bean) by accident.  I forgot I had the font in the same color as the wash on the fur (Teddy Bear Brown).  So I glazed the "E" with a little white to fix it.  Then I trimmed back the cross in "T".  But it was on top of the "E".  So I whited out portions of the and redrew, but now the spacing is all off.
At some point, you have to realize you are your own worst enemy. So I stepped away to eat something and came back to fixing the font. A little TB Brown to fix the cross in the "T"... A little white between the "U" and "B"... And I felt it was a lot better.

Left Teddy for the day to experiment on blood a little (more on that later). Came back next day to tighten a few other details, namely:
  • Glaze of FolkArt Dove White to get more white plate than blue plate
  • Some more dark wash around the eyes to make the crazy pop more
  • Some yellowish color at the base of each tooth so they look more realistic (FolkArt Cappuccino)

Monday, December 15, 2014

Teddy 2: First coat

First coat of Teddy Bear Tan on the body.  A little black outline on the eyes, claws, nose, badge area, and pads around the ears and hands.  

I used to exclusively prime black/ drybrush white. Its a great method for beginners to learn about shadows and separation lines. You do sacrifice some richness, though, and it requires a lot of build-up to re-create it.  

Now I almost always prime white, so the black wash or "eyeliner" phase is so cruicial and sometimes I miss it in my desire to see what that first coat looks like. This mini has been a lessons learned. The teeth had so much "pop" after the black wash.

I have an Apple Barrel Dusty Mauve that's a perfect color for gums. My mistake is using the next red color up Apple Barrel Burgundy as a lip color. Its too deep of a red and I almost turned Teddy into a cheap harlot. I'm going to leave it as the bottom gum line and inside of the lip, but have to find the right lip color. (Funny question to ask for a teddy bear.) Here I started re-painting white the top of the lip white...
Decided on FolkArt Honeycomb for the lip just to give it a slightly darker tone than the fur.  For the "crazy eyes", I used Reaper's HD paints: outer circle Brilliant Red, then Fireball Orange then Entrail Pink with a dot of Crimson Red as the pupil.

Filling out the middle circle of the bade was FolkArt True Blue, little more Delta Ceramcoat Sky Blue, FolkArt French Blue, and finally Delta Ceramcoat Baby Blue.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Teddy, Part 1: Concept and badge

I think most writers will admit that as much as they love the heroes, the villains grow to being their favorites. I'm not a psychologist, but I think it's because when your writing about abject evil - something so odious that your mind instinctively recoils from it - you begin to face the things that scare you. You recognize why it scared you in the first place. You feel empowered by that process, and they become less frightening. 

In the end, you begin to enjoy the villain, not so much because you relate to their actions, but because you remember the empowerment of facing the worst your own brain can dish out.

In that vein, Malifuax's first edition of Teddy is one of the more disturbing minis I've seen... and I loved it the first time I saw it.  Its everything I think about in a nightmare: some deep-seeded childhood memory of safety and comfort turned upside down into a twisted, unsettling threat.  A psychological weapon in that it frightens you even more than it could harm you. (And Teddy can bring the hurt.)

The other great aspect of Teddy is that front piece. It has some thing unique for a mini: a wide space for an artist to add their own originality. I wanted to add my own level of subversion to the figure: the Clean Plate Club.  It's strikes home for me in an unusual way.

There's a piece in Neil Gaiman's Mr. Punch that captures a childhood insecurity / fear of mine. When adults teased me as a kid, there's a part of my kid consciousness that was never really sure whether or not they were kidding. If a family member said, "I could just gobble you up!" there was a small part of me that always wondered if they were secretly plotting to throw me in the cooking pot. I think the Clean Plate Club talks to that fear quite well.

So to the painting: Light fur color seemed most appealing after reading Mako's article in Wyrd's Chronicles #14 about how many dark-furred Teddy's there are out there. There are quite a few amazing ones (my fave here). But I wanted to get the a little blood dripping down from the mouth, similar to this. Lighter fur will make red pop more.  Decided on a lighter brown and was stuck between FolkArt Honeycomb and Teddy Bear Tan. Picked TB Tan mostly due to its lighter shade, not the name.  Picked a rich blue as the cool part of the triad - Delta Ceramcoat Sky Blue.  The two looked nice together.

Originally I was going to re-enact the Zazzle pic by having a dark background with lighter lettering. So I started with the lettering, making sure I could get spacing and style right, using a light color on the letters (FolkArt Camel).
Problem is, I was so pleased with the lettering, I began doubting that filling in the white background with a darker Sky Blue color would be uneven.  My wife chimed in she liked it not filled in - almost like a Care Bear. Warped Care Bear has been done a lot, but I trust her judgment.