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40k Humor and Short Stories

Good Reads 2016 – Humor and Stories

Be it the Grim Dark Future or the Chaotic Realms of Age of Sigmar, they all need a bit of extra humor dashed in there to tone down the madness right? Or perhaps it’s a great short story that adds a bit of depth to a new force.

40k Humor and Short Stories

These are my collection of Good Reads 2016 Humor and Story Articles pulled from my bi-weekly Good Reads post, emailed in links that I missed, and a few posts of my own. Click through and check them out, bookmark it for later, and don’t miss the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Surviving a Death World

Captain Catachan from Games Workshop

Captain Catachan from Games Workshop

Games Workshop is coming out in a big way on social media and non-standard marketing such as The Regimental Standard. Adding some fluff around the Catachan’s fighting style, a Captain helps a new set of recruits with the rules of the jungle. Actually, I could post up nearly every one of their posts!

Thoughts Hobby Blogging

Random Hobby Picture by Corrm

Random Hobby Picture by Corrm

If you are reading this, clearly you are interested in blogs about our hobby. Also interested in how and why to blog about it? Corrm at St. Andrews Wargaming put together an epic post on his thoughts about hobby blogging.

Origin of the Deathwatch

Original Brother Artemis Mini from Games Workshop

Original Brother Artemis Mini from Games Workshop

Having been involved with Games Workshop for many years, Gav Thorpe recently shared his story on the genesis of Deathwatch and why Space Marines were included in the Inquisitor 54mm scale range.

Keeping a Reader’s Attention

Guest post by Thor on how to keep the attention of your readers

Thor knows a ton about blogging, so when he guest posts with helpful tips on how to keep your readers engaged so that they finish reading your epic post, be sure to take some notes and try a few of his suggestions – they are super easy and make a big difference.

When Weathering Goes Bad

Shamelessly Stolen from Gothmog

Shamelessly Stolen from Gothmog

Bringing some perspective to the weathering rage, Gothmog shares his thoughts on weathering vehicles from his actual experience in service. It’s a good read even if you like making your tanks super rusted but could be a reality check for some of us.

Deleted Scenes of Burning of Prospero

Burning of Prospero Humor

Cut Scenes by Honda

To mix in some humor, Honda took the pictures from Forge World’s Burning of Prospero table and added his own deleted scenes commentary. Adds a new spin to the wonderful models on display and if I ever get the chance to see it in person I think I’ll have Dust in the Wind playing through my head too!

Thoughts on Oldhammer

There is a certain charm to thinking about the glorious days of lead-tin models, cardboard cities, and 80s music. Sean wrote about his thoughts on Oldhammer and why he loves the community built around this sub-niche. They even have an annual event to celebrate and game together!

Primarch Humor

Primach Color Humor

Make it So! Image Used without permission but humor by Nick of The Burning Eye

Every wonder about the color choices of the Legions? Nick thinks about what the poor Tech Adept would respond to each Primarch’s selection. Throw in a perfect pairing of Picard memes and prepare for some chuckles.

The Flayed Ones

Flayed Ones by D Powers

You may know D Powers by the incredible conversions, but you don’t want to miss these two short stories as well. The first is about a marine’s madness before the onslaught of Flayed Ones and the second is an incredible (and dark) story of knights battling.

Wrap Up

I hope you enjoyed a look back at some of the AMAZING things your fellow hobbyists have done and shared through their blogs. Make sure you visit as many as you can and leave them a comment with your thoughts and encouragement.

And don’t forget the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Best Inspirational Hobby Articles of 2016

Good Reads 2016 – Inspirational Articles

Sometimes you just need fantastic looking models to look at. Be it to spur a new level of creativity, break the boredom of work, or inspire a brand new idea for an army. The Inspirational collection is by far the biggest, so take your time and come back for more!

Best Inspirational Hobby Articles of 2016

These are my collection of Good Reads 2016 Inspirational Articles pulled from my bi-weekly Good Reads post, emailed in links that I missed, and a few posts of my own. Click through and check them out, bookmark it for later, and don’t miss the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

 Exalted Vermin Lord

Exalted Vermin Lord

Vermin Lord by Mihalis “Cadaver” Skalkos

The Skaven are an incredible army in a talented painter’s hand and Mihalis’ Exalted Vermin Lord is proof of this. Between the raw scars, sickly bruises, and glowing Warpstone, it is incredible to look at.

They Pilgryms of Iron Sleet

Converted Pilgrym

Pilgrym by Kari on Iron Sleet

The team at Iron Sleet are constantly putting some amazing Inquisitor conversions so it is hard to pick any one post to highlight here. Kari’s Pilgrym Adsum Levit Aaronic is an incredible example of the conversions and painting going on with their Pilgrym project.

Genestealer Cult Magus

Genestealer Cult Magus by Wilhelm

Genestealer Cult Magus by Wilhelm

The Deathwatch box has some incredible miniatures and Wilhelm took the Genestealer Cult Magus and made minor modifications that really change the dynamic.  The creepy servo skull is also a nice bonus.

Alpha Legion Sicarian

Sicarian Battle Tank by GunGrave

Sicarian Battle Tank by GunGrave

The newer style of Alpha Legion’s metallic blue can be quite impressive. The GunGrave took this awesome look to the next level by using a stencil to airbrush scales onto the armor plates of his Sicarian Battle Tank. I’ve put the stencils from Fallout Hobbies on my wish list of things to check out myself.

Domitars

Domitar by Rob Hill

Domitar by Rob Hill

Rob put together a great pair of a Domitars that are not only painted extremely well, but he did a fantastic job of posing them to create a great sense of motion and story. The gory trooper at his feet also provides a nice contrast to his cool, robotic look.

Meeting of Scouts

Scratch Built Tanks by Klaus Fischer

Scratch Built Tanks by Klaus Fischer

There are two types of scratch builders in my mind: the economist who is trying to hack together an expensive model and those trying to create something completely new. Klaus is one of those who takes raw plastic strips and tubes and creates magic, this time with his Meeting of Scouts diorama. What I love about his work is that he walks you through his steps and thoughts along the way – on top of creating models that tell a story.

Renegade Knights

Chaos Knights by Third Eye Nuke

Chaos Knights by Third Eye Nuke

I just received my box of Imperial Knight: Renegade and very much looking forward to adding both to my current knight to have a viable detachment. ThirdEyeNuke went the opposite route and is painting both of his as traitors. But he didn’t go for the ‘just slap some chaos stars on there’ route but instead making them full blown Death Guard members.

Storm Talon

Storm Talon by Jeff Tibbetts

Storm Talon by Jeff Tibbetts

Tibbetts has returned to painting his Marines with a nicely finished Storm Talon for his Eagle Eyes. One of the cool ideas I got from watching his WIP posts is that he glazes the green with yellow to tone it back down.

Thousand Sons Forge Fiend

Forge Fiend by Rory Priest

Forge Fiend by Rory Priest

Rory has been constantly improving his painting and modeling skills, taking ideas from the many great bloggers in our hobby and putting them to great use. His latest finished piece is a Forge Fiend for his Thousand Sons, but with a great orange twist in honor of Thor.

Moritat Conversion

Moritat by Dave Taylor

Moritat by Dave Taylor

Another fantastic painter, hobbyist, and all around great personality in the hobby world, Dave Taylor took the much used Nurgle Lord and created a fantastic Death Guard Moritat. It’s amazing what this model can be used for in the hands of these great hobbyists.

Cherry Blossoms

Samurai in Cherry Blossom Land

Samurai in Cherry Blossoms by The Fantasy Hammer

Perhaps it is because of so many cherry trees in my part of the world, or Master Uguay’s dramatic exit, but this scene by The Fantasy Hammer looks fantastic with the Samurai standing among the blossoms.

INQ28 Techno-Barbarian Ma’tu

This was my first Inquisitor28 model that I painted to review WarColour paints and brushes as I needed something to paint all the turquoise colors they sent me. Based off the free Stormcast from White Dwarf, this techno-barbarian is just the first of his crew.

World Eaters Apothecary

https://eternalhunt.wordpress.com/2016/06/09/etl-v-the-doctor-is-in/

World Eaters Apothocary by krautscientist

I also couldn’t pass by Krautscientist’s fantastic World Eaters Apothecary. Between the pose, the details, and the story, he does an amazing job of giving his hunters a sense of realism (and fear!).

NovaOpen Grots

Grots By Greg Hess

Grots By Greg Hess

Greg is incredible with his Orks. Between painting them with washes and extreme weather of his walkers, his Orks look incredible. He just finished painting an incredible looking unit of Grots – that’s right, Grots – for NovaOpen.

Inquisitor Lazaros

Captain-Inquisitor Lazaros by J.E.

Captain-Inquisitor Lazaros by J.E.

As I get further into the world of Inq28 the more amazing conversions I find. J.E. from the Convertorum is building up a Black Ship crew with the Captain-Inquisitor above as the leader. It’s all the little details like the robotic leg and arm and the questionably chaos chest plate that make this guy so cool looking.

Dark Angel Jet Fighter

Dark Angels Jet fighter by Dave Weston

Dark Angels Jetfighter by Dave Weston

The Dark Angel Nephilim Jetfighter is a pretty cool model in its own right, but Dave’s paint job is fantastic. Between the red marble wings, verdigris, and hand painted details.

Carnival of Venom Death

Dark Eldar Carnival Venom by NafNaf

Dark Eldar Carnival Venom by NafNaf

NafNaf has been working on his fantastic Carnival version of the Dark Eldar. His Venom cruiser is just the latest in his crazy cool army. It’s those top hats that really do it 🙂

Aztec Themed Space Marines

Aztec Marines by Rednekkz

Aztec Marines by Rednekkz

I love to find non-traditional Space Marines as they help expand our creative thinking. RednekkBoss decided to go with an Aztec themed marines including jade and terracotta armor and colorful details.

Thousand Sons Contemptor

Contemptor by Mordian

Contemptor by Mordian

Contemptor Dreadnoughts are pretty cool models, much more dynamic than the 40k versions. Combine that with the awesomeness that is Heresy Thousand Sons, and you have Moridan’s great look models.

Salamander Storm

Landspeeder Storm by Blazmo

Landspeeder Storm by Blazmo

So here is another new addition to my blog feed thanks to Mike’s Better Know a Blogger series. Blazmo shows off his completed Landspeeder Storm for his Salamander army. He traded out a bunch of bits to make them more exciting than the standard scouts.

Orruk Megaboss

Orruk Megaboss by Roman

Orruk Megaboss by Roman

Roman did a fantastic job on the Orruk Megaboss with a few minor tweaks and some epic blue paint. (check out my review of the model here). Taking some ideas for my own.

Doom Rider Strikes Again

Doomrider by Rory

Doomrider by Rory

Rory knocked it out of the park custom Doom Rider build. I have a special fondness for 3rd Edition Chaos Space Marines and all their awesome characters, so seeing Rory’s Doomrider makes me so happy!

Dark Blood Drinkers

Angels Encarmine by D Power

Angels Encarmine by D Power

While I’m not a huge Blanche fan (I know half of you just booed me right now!) I do appreciate when hobbyists do fantastic conversions and paint jobs to emulate his style. D Power is one of those artists as exemplified by the Angels Encarmine. Also, check out the converted Skitarii at the bottom of the post!

Carnival of Pain

Converted Dark Eldar Talos

Dark Carnival Talos by NafNaf

Another one of the incredible conversions by NafNaf for his Carnival, this time a reimagined Talos that is both horrifying and colorful. An incredible imagination balanced with a fantastic use of bits created this nightmare.

Nurgle Drake

Nurgle Drake by Miniatures of Tomorrow

Nurgle Drake by Miniatures of Tomorrow

I’ve been following Miniature of Tomorrow’s work on this Drake for weeks, and it is fantastic to see the completed model – a Nurgle Drake Diorama (Imgur gallery). You can check out his build process and other awesome work on his Tumblr as well.

Broodlord

Broodlord by The Fantasy Hammer

Broodlord by The Fantasy Hammer

To emphasize the power your old posts have (and why Thor’s SEO series does help!), The Fantasy Hammer commented on my Broodlord Tutorial from last year saying it helped him paint his own amazing Broodlord from Space Hulk. He clearly took the lesson and turned it up to 11!

A Dread Above All Others

Deff Dread by Greg

Deff Dread by Greg

Nova Open is having their annual raffle to raise money for Doctors Without Borders (buy tickets to win an army!). Each model is painted by awesome people like Greg who spent countless eons adding about a billion layers to the Deff Dread above. Seriously, check out the finished model, then read his WIP posts – epic stuff.

Space Wolf Breacher Squad

Space Wolf Breacher Squad

Gray Wolves by Dave

I personally love the mix of Greek mythos and Sci Fi grimdark. So you can see why I like Dave’s Space Wolf Breacher squad. Well, that and he did a fantastic job of painting them. Check out the detail work on the shield and a nice grittiness to the whole unit.

Treelord Ancient

Treelord Ancient by Turkadactyl

Treelord Ancient by Turkadactyl

The new Sylvaneth (treemen) are some amazing kits and if I didn’t have just a huge backlog, I would have jumped in on their release. But Turkadactyl is going full bore with his trees, painting them in a bright spring color scheme, complete with cherry blossom pink.

Chief Warlord Engineer Ikit Claw

Old School Oldhammer Warlord Engineer Ikit Claw

Ikit Claw by Mihalas Cadaver

Not only is this an incredible Skaven painted by Cadaver, but is an fantastic example of Oldhammer elegance! The custom banner and base are excellent additions as well.

Reaper Minis

Eldritch Demon by Sean

Eldritch Demon by Sean

You may remember Sean’s post on Oldhammer, but it’s not just old Citadel models he pines over. He posted up his collection of old Reaper minis full of old-time character but with great, modern painting.

Xiphon Interceptor Complete

Xiphon Interceptor

Xiphon Interceptor by Gothmog

Forge World makes some great looking flyers, even Space Marines get flyers that look like they could actually fly. Gothmog painted up a nice Xiphon Interceptor for his Blood Angles that looks brilliant in all that red.

Iron Circle

Iron Circle by Xach for the Iron Warriors

Iron Circle by Xach

I am a long time Iron Warriors fanboy, and of course picked up Angel Exterminatus. The Iron Circle was only mentioned a few times but they sounded so cool. The recently released models by Forge World are awesome, but Xach depicted one brilliantly with some awesome weathering. (oh he has a Warsmith on there too!).

Necron Triarch

Necron Triarch Praetorian with green and blue

Necron by Grenn Dal

Necrons have always been one of those armies that I have wanted to do (killer robots are irresistible after all!). I also love blue, so when I saw Grenn’s Necron Triarch Praetorian, I had to share him here. It’s a fantastic metallic blue and green that adds interest to the metal warrior.

Red Hunters

Red Hunters from Deathwatch

Red Hunters by Gothmog

I hadn’t heard of the Red Hunters until Gothmog’s post on them, but I really like how he used the Death Watch set to build them. It’s a great use of all those inquisitor bits for this specialty chapter and yet not painting more black and silver.

Sons of Horus Levithan Dreadnought

Leviathan Dreadnought by Red Scorps

Leviathan Dreadnought by Red Scorps

It’s not Dreadtober yet, but Red Scorps painted up this beautiful Leviathan Dreadnought for his Sons of Horus. I love the little details like the ruined Tarantula under his feet and the battle damage. To see the fully, army, he also posted a few shots of the beauties.

Glowing Malifaux

Malifaux Metal Gamin with Glowing Metal

Malifaux Metal Gamin by Cameron

Malifaux is an interesting looking game full of diverse creatures and characters. Cameron added two Metal Gamin for his Arcanist crew to summon. He did a great job of contrasting the muted grey bodies with the glowing, red weapons.

Death Rattle Army

Death Rattle Army by Heavens Teeth

Army by Heaven’s Teeth

One of the nice benefits of the new ruleset in Age of Sigmar is being able to create small armies that play well. No longer needing blocks of 100 skeletons, Heaven’s Teeth built up this Death Rattle army rather quickly and it looks great.

Forge World Tyrant Conversion

Forge World Hive Tyrant into Tyranid Prime

Hive Tyrant/Prime by Grenn Dal

I hadn’t realized that Forge World had done a Hive Tyrant model, but Grenn Dal took his and transformed it into a Prime instead with a miasma cannon that looks pretty awesome.

Nekima in Blood

Nekima painted by Zab

Nekima by Zab

Zab from Almost Perftec has been working on this lady for awhile but has now completed his Nekima model. He’s got some great tips on make the gory red base in there too which is awesome.

Sylvaneth Treelord Ancient

Sylvaneth Treelord Ancient with flowers

Treelord Ancient by Turkadactyl

I’m claiming it now, if GW puts out one of the Christmas box sets for the Sylvaneth, I am finally giving in. In the meantime, I’ve really enjoyed Turkadactyl’s tree army grow, this week with his finished Treelord Ancient.

Creepiest Army on Parade Ever

Creepy Army on Display

A small part of Wilhelm’s super creepy board

I’m pretty sure I’ve covered a few of Wilhelm’s creepy-awesome army build, but here he has outdone himself with his Army on Display board. Not only are there a few odd heads into the display, but it has three levels of monsters in the dark.

Mongo the Beast

Dave Taylor's Mongo from Dark Age

Mongo by Dave Taylor

Dave Taylor is a fantastic artist and this model, Mongo from Dark Age is a testament to his skills. Between the fantastic warm skin tones and the cool concrete blocks, it’s a great composition and great weathering.

Magos Titus

Converted AdMech Magos

Magos by Apologist

Apologist is a constant source of amazing conversions. His AdMech Magos is no exception. That and the awesome fluff he wrote for it makes it well worth the read.

Genestealer Cults Rockgrinder

Goliath Rockgrinder by Amy

Goliath Rockgrinder by Amy

One of the cool aspects of the Genestealer Cult is their utilitarian look. Amy really brought this out with her Goliath Rockgrinder with that awesome red dust effect.

Amazing Dimachaeron

Dimachaeron from Forge World

Dimachaeron by Wolfsherz

Wolfsherz is painting up some incredible Tyranid monsters including this beautiful Dimachaeron from Forge World. Not only does he have amazing painting skills, but he paints each peice before assembling the whole model!

Mechanical Vermin Lord

Mechanical Vermin Lord

Vermin Lord by Jake at Ex Profundis

Going in the other extreme, Jake is showing off his WIP Skavan Vermin Lord built from a Knight kit! I’m not sure why he wants a twelve inch tall rat, but I am sure it would be intimidating to play against.

Techmarine Dreadnought

Techmarine Dreadnought

Dreadnought by Marc

Marc had a Techmarine character who didn’t make it past a slightly larger Tyranid monster, so to immortalize his heroics, Marc built up this great Techmarine Dreadnought. With a conversion beamer, tech harness, and even an extra power generator, this is clearly a unique model!

Imperial Guard Spec Ops

Converted Spec Ops Imperial Guard

Spec Ops by Rory

Taking a step outside his Chaos Marines, Rory tried out some commission work with these Spec Ops Imperial Guard. Not only do they look great, but he was given a bunch of third party bits to use on them, making them truly unique.

Converted Haemonculus/Venom/Flyer/… Thing

Converted Dark Eldar Haemonculus

Haemonculus Venom by Mr. Pink

Mr. Pink’s Dark Eldar coven is among my favorite converted armies. Something about the dark kin make them ripe for disturbing and amazing conversions. In a peek inside his mental state, Mr. Pink shared the steps to create the Haemonculus Venom Lots of greenstuff and creative use of bits.

Birth of a Chaos Knight Titan

Chaos Knight Titan

Chaos Knight Titan by Thor of Creative Twilight

Anyone who finishes a Knight Titan deserves an award. And to do one with such incredible degree of details, Thor’s Chaos Knight Titan deserves an extra reward. Named Ironfate, Thor has put an amazing amount of work into painting him.

Converted Gal Vorbak

Converted Gal Vorbak

Gal Vorbak by Eric of PlasticMetalResin

Forge World’s models are epic, and the Gal Vorbak of the Word Bearers are no exception. The problem Eric ran into is that he already had five of them and didn’t want the second five to be copies. So instead, he converted all five Gal Vorbak with subtle changes like tentacles and heads.

A Vengeful Gun

Vengeance Weapon Battery

A Big Gun painted by Siph of Weemen

At some point I need to get more terrain built and painted as I figure it will make easier to start playing again. Here Siph shows off a nicely done Vengeance Weapon platform with a neat trick to switch it from battle cannon to the Punisher Cannon.

Orruk Ironjawz Brutes

Orruk Irnjawz Brutes in Orange Armor

Orruk Brutes by Amy on Tale of Painters

Not going to lie, I like orks, orcs, and orruks. I also like how Amy paints her Orruks in orange armor, and this squad of brutes is no exception. The orange is bright enough to be interesting without being in your face.

Alas that is a Nice Figure

Alas Bust

‘Alas’ by Will on Miniatures of Tomorrow

Now that Will is done painting dick monsters, he switched his attention to painting this beautiful sculpt, ‘Alas’ for his wife. You can check out his Tumblr for some of his incredible step-by-step progress as well.

Grand Master D Powers

Converted Grand Master Gabriel in Blanche style

Gabriel by D Powers for Marc

Not long ago the talented D Powers started doing commission work and Marc jumped right in with a request for Grand Master Gabriel for his Dark Angels. Let’s just say D didn’t disappoint! Staying true to the Blanch-ian style, this is an incredible conversion.

Imperial Boarding Action

Imperial Fist Boarding Marines

Imperial Fist Marines by Rory

Yellow is a tough color to paint, but Rory took it head on with this Imperial Fist Breacher Squad. He has some good looking Terminators in there as well.

Mork & Gork: The Knights’ Tale

Renegade Ork Knight Titan Conversion

The Renegade Ork Knight Mork by Greg

To provide some major firepower Dakka and, more importantly, a ton of Waaaggh!!! to his Trust in Rust force, Greg converted a pair of Knight Titans into impressive mechanical beasts worthy of being idols of the two green gods.

Purple Ad Mech Dragoon/Ironstrider

Purple Iron Strider and Dragoon

Iron Strider by Green Dal

It’s great to see Skatarii and Ad Mech in non-red color schemes and Gren Dal’s purple Iron Strider is a fantastic alternative. He has also magnetized the model so it can turn into a Dragoon as well.

Phatom Titan of the Stars

Eldar Revenant Titan

Eldar Titans by Clyde

Normally I think the Elday Revenant Titan looks fake with so many smooth, unadorned surfaces. But Clyde proves me wrong with his stunning paint work. The colors and start effects are fantastic and great interest to all those flat surfaces.

La Dance Macabre

Dark Eldar Harlequin Carnival Conversions

Carnival Eldar by NafNaf

NafNaf has had a couple of his creative nightmares featured here, and finally he has put the whole army together! Check out the playable Carnival conversions of Dark Eldar, Eldar and Harlequins. An incredible work of art throughout the army.

Death Guard Contemptor

Death Guard Contemptor Dreadnought

Contemptor by Cadaver

The Death Guard can be difficult to balance between painting great looking colors and weathering. Cadaver does a great job balancing that on this awesome looking Contemptor Dreadnought.

Master of the Forge and Snakes

Iron Snakes Master of the Forge

Master of the Forge by Marc

I’m a fan of Marc’s Iron Snake both for the cool over-the-top Greek look but also his great painting skills. Here he shows off his finished Master of the Forge. Some of the details are incredible on this guy including the verdigris fade and glow effects.

Age of Santa

Age of Santa

Santa by The Fantasy Hammer

Getting into the holiday spirit, The Fantasy Hammer made a Santa from a Stormcast as a gift. It’s a simple conversion but a great execution, including the extra snow on the model.

Hundreds of Zombies

Painted Zombicide Miniatures

Zombies by Warhammer39,999

What is scarier than a zombie? Painting 380 or so of them! Warhammer39,999 painted the miniatures for Zombicide over a collection of posts in 2016. Each is well worth checking out, escpecially all the heros which come with a zombie version!

Dreadtober 2016

Dreadtober 2016 Completed Showcase

I hosted Dreadtober this year and we had a fantastic turnout! The final showcase is a post of inspirational models just unto itself. Even if you don’t like Dreadnoughts, make sure you check it out as there are many great conversions.

Wrap Up

I hope you enjoyed a look back at some of the AMAZING things your fellow hobbyists have done and shared through their blogs. Make sure you visit as many as you can and leave them a comment with your thoughts and encouragement.

And don’t forget the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Best Painting Articles of 2016

Good Reads 2016 – Painting Articles

It’s no secret that I love painting miniatures and love tutorials, so it should be no surprise that I have so many Good Reads in the painting category! Some of the tutorials are great for beginners getting started, others will find some awesome tips from expert painters.

Best Painting Articles of 2016

These are my collection of Good Reads 2016 Painting Articles pulled from my bi-weekly Good Reads post, emailed in links that I missed, and a few posts of my own. Click through and check them out, bookmark it for later, and don’t miss the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Painting Bases

Base by Wilhem

Base by Wilhem

Wilhel is back this week with a great step-by-step on how he paints his bases. They are a great mix of jungle, marble tile, and 40k morbid gothic. And he makes it look so simple too! If you want to see the monster he put on this beautiful base, check out his Tyranid mutant as well.

Creating Realistic Yew Trees

Yew Trees by Dagger and Brush

Yew Trees by Dagger and Brush

I recently stumbled across the Dagger and Brush but I’m already a fan of their work. Just as an example is this week’s tutorial (and epic read on Yew forests) is how to build and paint a yew tree. While the hyper-realistic isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, you have to admit he does some amazing work to make the scene above look like a movie shot.

Painting Yellow and White

Models painted by Dave G.

Models painted by Dave G.

Ask a hobbyist what the hardest two colors are to paint and you can bet they will be: yellow and white. Dave G dives right into these colors with a fantastic tutorial on not only painting these hard colors, but also some great painting tips as well.

Another Mansions of Madness Painter

C'thonian by Scott Ferguson

C’thonian by Scott Ferguson

I’m still slogging through my miniatures from the Mansions of Madness game and it’s been great to watch Scott as he does a set as well. I’ve definitely stolen some ideas for the pieces I haven’t yet finished.

Removing the Shine from Decals

Emperor's Children by Judging Jester

Emperor’s Children by Judging Jester

Decals are hard enough to set in place to where you need them to, let alone make them look like they fit into the rest of the model.  Judging Jester put together his thoughts on Army Painter’s Anti-shine medium to get his decals to look amazing.

Painting Light and Dark Skin

Painting Black Faces

To help improve my own ability to paint faces and put together a set of tutorials, I painted up four faces with four different styles and color variations. You can check out the Dark Skin Tutorial as shown above or the Light Skin Tutorial as well.

Painting the Realm Gates

Realm Gates Tutorial

Realm Gates by Tyler M.

The Realm Gates are an iconic part of the new Age of Sigmar and some great looking scenery pieces to fight over. Tyler M. of Mengel Miniatures put together a great tutorial on how he painted his up. It is fairly quick but looks great.

Using the Gemstone Paints

Painting Gems by Scott Ferguson

Painting Gems by Scott Ferguson

The new Gemstone Paints from Games Workshop are a nice addition to make painting all those gems and soul stones much easier. While their “just paint this over silver” approach look OK, Scott shows that combining the new paints with a few pre-shaded layers, the finished gem looks fantastic.

Fixing Grainy Primer

Fuzzy Primed Butts by Thor

Fuzzy Primed Butts by Thor

Getting a good layer of primer on your model is an often overlooked step in painting, but provides the critical canvas for your paints to adhere to. If your primer spray ended up being a texture spray from being too cold, too far away, or the moon being in the wrong alignment, check out Thor’s great tip on fixing this annoying problem.

Painting Desert Bases

painting a desert base

Desert Base by Nagroth

So I’ve got a new blog to feature here (well at least for me). Nazroth from Scar Hand Painting put together a great tutorial on painting simple, but great looking desert bases. Bases are something that I haven’t done a whole lot with so its great to see when others put together tutorials on them.

Painting Non-Metalic Metals

Stormcast with NMM

Stormcast by Darren Latham

OK so this one is a few weeks old, but I wanted to add it in here. Painting master Darren Latham wrote up how he does non-metallic metals (NMM) including looking where lighting would come from and some amazingly painted miniatures.

Blood and Acid Tutorial

Broodlord by FantasyHammer

Broodlord by FantasyHammer

I shared The Fantasy Hammer’s Broodlord last time, but he returns with a great tutorial on adding gore and slime to your models. He makes it seem so easy, but with the right tools it probably is.

Concrete Walls

Painting Concrete Walls

Concrete Walls by Scar Hand Painting

Line of sight blocking terrain is important for any gaming system and concrete walls are the simplest ways to do this. Scar Hand Painting wrote up a tutorial on how he painted the Micro Art Studio wall set. Fairly simple, but very striking.

Mindset of Painting

Guest Author D Powers on the Mindset of Painting

As a guest author, D Powers goes into how each person needs to develop their own style and accept that there are difference between Norman Rockwells and Blachian painters – and that’s ok.

Painting Word Bearers

How to Paint Word Bearers by Death of a Rubrist

Word Bearer by Apologist

Apologist from Death of a Rubrist does incredible work, the latest is creating a multipart painting guide for Word Bearers. Some incredible tips from this amazing artist.

Getting Muddy

How to Make Muddy Bases

Mud Bases by James Wappel

I’m not the only one making muddy bases this week as James Wappel shows how he makes realistic mud bases using MIG powders. It’s great to see the different colors and approach he takes to hint at mud and splatter, without going overboard.

Painting a Golden Deamon Winner

Dark Eldar Wych Dual

Wych Receiving the bad end of a blow by Kirsten

In part II of the series, Rory shares Kirsten’s thoughts and steps on painting theWych half of her dual. It’s awesome to see why she chose certain colors. Awesome tip from her post: use a soft, 4B pencil for marking freehand. You can also skip to part III where she paints up the Seraphim.

Marines and Paint Set

Marines by Zab

Marines by Zab

Want a hobby challenge, one that limits what you can use? Zab did that with painting up the Marine starter paint set. Only the 8 basic colors and press-fit marines. But they look awesome. He has a couple of WIP posts on it too that show his thoughts on color usage.

Painting Space Marines

How to Paint Space Marines

Painting Space Marines by Garfy

The team at Tale of Painters is constantly putting out good looking models, and Garfy has been featured a few times in White Dwarf. Over the years he has put together a ton of tutorials as well, and now all his Space Marine painting guides are gathered in one place. It’s cool to see the colors and styles all together.

Quick and Easy Urban Bases

Easy Urban Bases Painting Tutorial

Bases by Mr. Pink

It’s easy to forget about the model’s base, but it can make a huge difference it the model’s composition. To get a set of Sector Imperialis bases down quickly, Mr. Pink gives tips on using simple drybrush and washes. There is even a part two that adds in masking fluid and rust effects.

Painting Blue Ad-Mech

Guest Post by Ben on Painting Blue Adeptus Mechanicus

As another guest author, Ben from Moose Studios gives us his step-by-step tutorial on painting Blue Skatarii and AdMech models. I like the blue on them as it gives a cool, calculated look to them.

How To: Chipped Paint

How to Paint Chipped Paint

Tutorial by Scott on The Brush Wizard.

Adding chipped paint to a model is one of the basic ways of adding weathering. It can be as hard as you make it to be, but Scott shows a few steps to take to make them really pop. With only a few extra colors, you can give your models some extra character.

Masters of the Sword

How to Paint High Elf Sea Guard

Sea Guard by Volomir

I haven’t seen many step-by-step tutorials for High Elves or airbrushing foot troopers, so Volomir’s tutorial on painting the Sea Guard was incredible to look through. And these are only the core troops!

Wrap Up

I hope you enjoyed a look back at some of the AMAZING things your fellow hobbyists have done and shared through their blogs. Make sure you visit as many as you can and leave them a comment with your thoughts and encouragement.

And don’t forget the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Best Gaming Articles of 2016

Good Reads 2016 – Gaming Articles

While I often focus on the art side of our hobby, I don’t completely neglect the gaming side. Be it a well crafted battle report, a look at other game systems, or some thoughts on winning competitions, many have written great articles on the subject.

Best Gaming Articles of 2016

These are my collection of Good Reads 2016 Gaming Articles pulled from my bi-weekly Good Reads post, emailed in links that I missed, and a few posts of my own. Click through and check them out, bookmark it for later, and don’t miss the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Prepping for Competition

A collection from MassiveVoodoo

A collection from MassiveVoodoo

While I have yet to travel for any painting competition, I can appreciate the massive amount of work that it would take to pack everything up and keep it all organized. The guys at Massive Voodoo are no strangers to traveling with amazing models, and thankfully they put together a checklist they go through to prepare.

Kings of War

King of War Skeletons by Jarrett Lee

Kings of War Skeletons by Jarrett Lee

With all the radical changes that happened with Age of Sigmar many gamers have started looking elsewhere for a rules system. Jarrett Lee from MiniJunkie talks about his growing love of Kings of War. Seems like a great way to push blocks of units around.

King of the Hill

Kingdom of Men Knights by Swordmaster

Speaking of Kings of War, Swordmaster put together a nice battle report between his Outcasts and a friends Kingdom of Men. Looks a lot like classic Warhammer battle reports with nice balanced blocks smashing into each other.

Conversion Points in Competitions

Conversion Points - an Outdated System by Rob

In today’s age of plastic injection wonder, Rob questions the value of keeping ‘conversion’ points in competition brackets. There is a great conversation in the comments as well as players argue one way or the other.

Story Based Game Event

Unknown Army, picture by Thor

Unknown Army, picture by Thor

Speaking of Thor, he did a write up of an event his has been running that is a story based campaign. Fratris Salutem looked like a fantastic event and the kind of event that I would love to attend.

Old Hammer Battle Report

Battle report by Sean

Battle report by Sean

Sean signed up to be a guest writer on Broken Paintbrush (check out his article this Saturday!) which is how I found his blog. Not only is he a hardcore Oldhammer fan, but he does his battle reports in a comic style.  Check the comic reports, and stay for the Oldhammer!

Learning About Infinity

pictures property of Corvus Belli

pictures property of Corvus Belli

Corrm had a guest writer, Chris Rhode, who shared his experience on learning about Infinity and how he got hooked. I like the idea of these small skirmish games as you get a lot more character in each model.

Shorehammer Review and Pictures

Wych Cult Death Match Table from Shorehammer

Wych Cult Death Match Table from Shorehammer

Tournaments and events are a great excuse to create some fun and inventive mini-games and Gren Dal shows us what Shorehammer had for this year, include the Wych Cult Death Match game above, a Gorkamorka race, and a no-holds bar 40k tournament.

Nova Open Picture Dump

img-6141_orig

Leave it to Greg to kills thousands of collective hours by fellow hobbyists staring at his huge picture dump of Nova Open. There are some fantastic armies in there worth spending the time to check out.

40k Comic Battle

40k Comic-style battle report

40k Battle Report Comic by Thomas

Another comic style battle report, this time by Thomas with a 40k battle between Chaos Space Marines and Tyranids. It’s fun seeing well placed pictures turned into classic comic action and Thomas does a great job narrating the scene.

Hussar Painting Competition

Hussar Painting Competition

Hussar is Poland’s big painting competition and The Fantasy Hammer gives us a taste of the amazing models entered in his video. Some amazingly talented painters and it’s great seeing the diversity in genres, styles, and compositions.

Loving the End Times and AoS

Image Copyright Games Workshop Used without Permission

The End Times was a traumatic experience for many long time Fantasy players, and even more so on the gaming community. Chuck shares his feelings on holding to the fun part of the hobby and story straight into the Age of Sigmar.

Some of My Favorite Board Games

A collection of my favorite family board games

A bit off subject with miniature wargaming, but I share my favorite board games to play with family. During this holiday break we have spent many hours playing these games, many over a nice brew and making memories.

Wrap Up

I hope you enjoyed a look back at some of the AMAZING things your fellow hobbyists have done and shared through their blogs. Make sure you visit as many as you can and leave them a comment with your thoughts and encouragement.

And don’t forget the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Good Reads 2016

Good Reads 2016 Some of My Favorite Posts of the Year

This week’s Good Reads is going to be epic. Rather than just adding in the last few week’s worth of posts, I have gone over all my previous Good Reads, articles sent me by others, and even a few of my own thrown in to bring you some of my favorite articles from 2016. So I bring you: Good Reads 2016 Edition!

Good Reads 2016

Before we get to far along, if I missed your posts or a blog altogether, please forgive me. There are so many amazing articles published every day that I can only see so many! So if you think I made a mistake in skipping an article, submit it to the comments below, send me an email: joe@brokenpaintbrush.com or hit me up on social media!

I’m not kidding about this: have zero shame in sending me your links!

I had originally set this up to be one massive article featuring all the posts, but quickly realized it would not only be too long to read, but was becoming painful to edit! So instead I broke it up into five categories, each with their own post.

Build Articles

From tips on scratch building models to amazing sculpting work, the Build Article Collection focuses on the first steps of the model. Some are tutorials for actually building parts of the model, others are WIP posts showing their conversions.

Best Articles for Building Miniatures

Painting Articles

With each of these being a tutorial or step-by-step series of pictures, this is a fantastic resource for beginners and expert painters alike. With tips on painting bases, specific models, or advanced tips for painting non-metallic metals, there is a ton to dig into here.

Best Painting Articles of 2016

Inspirational Articles

Plain and simple: these are amazing models to look at. From incredible conversions, unbelievable paint jobs, to memorable models, they are each worth a few seconds to sink into your eyeballs. Take some inspiration from them to spark that creative motivator or gain insight into each painter’s style.

Best Inspirational Hobby Articles of 2016

Gaming Articles

Focusing on the gaming and competitive side of the hobby, these articles include some great battle reports, tips on competitions, and reviews of some of the many wargaming conventions around the world.

Humor and Story Articles

Rounding the series off with some humor and stories, this is somewhat of a catchall but great articles nonetheless. With wit and humor some will have you rolling (at least I was) others are fan-based short stories for their own models, and a few editorials about the hobby.

40k Humor and Short Stories

Good Reads 2016 Wrap Up

What a year right!?!?

And just think, I was only able to cover a tiny fraction of the fantastic work being produced by fellow hobby bloggers. To all these bloggers, I know taking the extra time to write up articles to share is an achievement to itself, so to each of you I say: THANK YOU! It’s incredible to be a part of this community and see what everyone is working on.

To all the readers: THANK YOU!! Without your comments, shares, and thoughts so many of us would have given up long ago. So much of the incredible work can be attributed to each of the authors getting support from you and the community.

And here is to 2017, may it be filled with more amazing hobby time, creative energy, and a bigger, strong community!

Best Articles for Building Miniatures

Good Reads 2016 – Building Articles

Step 1: Build an Awesome Model. Not everyone likes to convert their model, but this collection focuses on those who go all out to make unique or brand new models from spare bits, lots of putty, and pure imagination.

Best Articles for Building Miniatures

These are my collection of Good Reads 2016 Building Articles pulled from my bi-weekly Good Reads post, emailed in links that I missed, and a few posts of my own. Click through and check them out, bookmark it for later, and don’t miss the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Dark Eldar Incubi Conversions

Dark Eldar Incubi Conversion

Dark Eldar Carnival Incubi Conversions by NafNaf

The clever and amazing NafNaf has put together yet another crazy cool unit for his Dark Eldar, a carnival themed army of creepy clowns and circus monsters. The new unit is a fantastic conversion of Incubi with top hats.

In fact, NafNaf is making such creating stuff, that Thor from Creative Twilight also featured his Incubi in a Blogger Showcase.

Thousand Sons Jetbikes

Thousand Sons Jetbike conversions

Thousand Sons Jetbikes by Mordian 7th

Modian is a machine when it comes to building and painting armies. This time, he is back to his Thousand Sons (third take now?) and included clever jet bike conversions using High Elf chariots.

Creating Rock Bases

Amazing Rock base by Scott Ferguson

Amazing Rock base by Scott Ferguson

Scott has been painting up a bunch of characterful models from Super Dungeon Explorer and creating fantastic looking bases for them. In a two-part series, he shows how he built and painted the rocky outcropping above. Though he kept the secret of the flowers out of this post.

A Little Village

Town by John Stiening

Town by John Stiening

Everyone dreams of battling over a fantastic table, covered in great looking buildings that set the scene.  John Stiening decided to do this for his Bolt Action games and create almost a whole town of plaster buildings. The cool thing about doing them in plaster is he has created a number of ruins out of it as well.

Custom Models Through Kitbashing

Tutorial on building a custom model with bit bashing and scuplting

As part of the Dreadtober series of tutorials, I wrote up some tips on kitbashing models with pinning, minor sculpting, and simple conversions – taking the Blood Angles Furioso and turning into a Mentor Legion Ironclad.

Making Mud

Muddy Tracks by James Wappel

Muddy Tracks by James Wappel

James Wappel is best known for his ‘shaded basecoat’ technique and painting amazing models super fast. He does some great tutorials around the other aspects of the hobby including this great look at how he made very convincing mud basesfor his Bolt Action tanks.

Building a Thermoplasma Generator

Scratch Built Thermoplasma Generator

Thermoplasma Generator by Marc

With spare parts and a bit of foam, Marc built this cool looking Thermoplasma Generator for his Dark Angles to fight over. I like the little touches like the tool box and hammer sitting next to the control panel.

Cleaning Resin

Cleaning Resin by the BigGoldFish

Cleaning Resin by the BigGoldFish

I’ve personally only done small accessories in resin, but I’ve seen plenty of problems with building and painting with it. TheBigGoldFish put together a post on cleaning resin kits to make sure that all your hard work stays put.

Magnetising the Stormhawk

Stormhawk by Corrm

Stormhawk by Corrm

The new Stormhawk is a fantastic addition to the Space Marine flyers, adding that hard and fast flyer to their fleet. Corrm from St. Andrews Wargaming wrote up how he added magnets to the weapons and how his thoughts on the new flyer with the updated flyer rules.

Custom Grot Bikers

Custom Scortcha by Blazmo

Custom Skorcha by Blazmo

Do you have some spare bits that need a model? Blazmo shames us all with his amazing creation of custom Grot skorchas built with scrap. Some awesome crazy mek work there – and hard to tell where some of the pieces come from, and when you do, the creativity required is impressive!

Slaughtersmith

Slaughtersmith by Thomas

Slaughtersmith by Thomas

Combining fantasy (or Age of Sigmar I guess) models into the 40k world can create some awesome characters. Thomas took the Slaughterpriest and created a custom Warpsmith for his army. Shows what you can do with spare bits and some guitar string.

Magnetizing a Knight

Magnetized Knight by Corrm

Magnetized Knight by Corrm

Mike has finished up his White Scars (only for the moment, I’m sure!) to build up a Knight Titan. But he wanted to do ALL the knight types… Solution: magnetize every bit of the Knight. He shows how with a ton of pictures so you can give it a try as well.

3D Printed Halftrack

Half Track 3D Printed

3D Printed Half Track by Cadaver

At some point 3D printing may take over miniature production and Cadaver shows how some details and a nice paint job can make it easy to overlook the rough printing.

Keeper of Secrets

Slaanesh Demon Prince Conversion from Verminlord

Slaanesh Demon Prince by WestRider on Cascadian Grimdark

Not one to wait another dozen years for the model, WestRider converted his own Slaanesh Demon Prince from a Vermin Lord. It’s an incredible twist on the Dark Princelings.

Getting the Right Lighting

Triple Tube Lighting Review

Having the right lighting for your hobby space is critical. Wolfsherz reviews the Triple Tube light and how it works for his hobby space.

Magnetized Hills

Creating Gaming Hills with Magnets

Hills by Dagger and Brush

Creating scratch terrain isn’t as common as it once was with the plethora of gaming companies creating awesome sets. But hills are always a great addition and fairly easy to make. Dagger and Brush put together a guide for creating hill with magnetsto hold on trees.

Building a Boat

img_09011

Wooden boat by Alex

I’m not sure how this fits into our hobby, but I thought it was a cool diversion. Alex created a step-by-step tutorial for how he built this boat from wooden coffee stir sticks. Now that’s scratch built!

Building a Custom Base

Build and Paint a Custom Base

A model’s base can be tricky business. Make it too simple, and the model looks simple, make it too busy, and it drowns out the model. One solution is to buy some of the amazing resin bases on the market, but sometimes you want to create a custom base yourself.

Making Wargaming Trees

Realistic Wargaming Trees Tutorial

Gaming Trees by Dagger&Brush

Peithetairos creates artful scenes for his wargaming tables, with trees being a big part. It’s not a typical tutorial, but he gets a ton of advice for taking basic plastic/wire trees and turning them into realistic forests. A ton of reference shots and little details to add in.

Forrest Themed Bases

Creating forest bases for goblins or sylvaneth

Night Goblins by The Fantasy Hammer

Adding a bit of color to your base is a nice touch, adding flora to a forest dwelling army is an extra special touch. Giving some tips in doing so, is The Fantasy Hammer’s Night Goblin Basing Tutorial. With a collection of different materials you can create a nice looking scene for them.

Lots of Nurgle Green Stuff

Converted Nurgle Helbrute

Nurgle Helbrute by Svartmetall on Stepping Between Games

Rory is at it again with sharing one of his buddy’s work, this time with Svartmetall and his custom sculpted Nurgle army. There is a serious amount of awesome there that you really need to check out. My favorite is the Helbrute above, but there are a ton of other conversions in there as well.

Trying to Make Snow

Testing out How to do Snow Effects

Snow Tests by The Fantasy Hammer

Add snow to bases is one of the ways to add a story to where the models are fighting. But to make it looks believable can be hard. Wanting to test out some ideas, The Fantasy Hammer built up 8 ‘bases’ and tried different techniques on each. It’s a nice way to try something new.

Chaos Trolls

Converted Chaos Troll

Chaos Troll by GuitaRasmus of Bitter Old Painters

Not happy with the standard Troll models, GuitaRasmus put his crazy-awesome conversion skills to work and built up a trio of Chaos Trolls and a Soul Grinder. Some amazing creativity in these models and all those extra limbs.

DIY Candles for Scenery

Custom Candles for Basing

Candles by Nazroth of Scar Hand Painting

In the gothic world of 40k or craziness of AoS, candles add a nice touch. Nazroth put together a nice tutorial on how he adds tiny candles to his bases – with and without flames. Other than trying to drill a teeny hole in a toothpick, they look super simple to do.

A Blood Pack Too Far

Blood Pact Bio Tank Conversion

Blood Pact Bio Tank by Big Boss Red Skulls

Big Boss Red Skulls has been on a building crazy between INQ28 models, Silver Tower conversions, and now this Blood Pack bio tank monster! Some amazingly creative conversions in there.

Building a Golden Demon Winner

Duel by Kirsten

As part 1 of this series, Rory shares how Kirsten built her Golden Demon winning duel between a Dark Eldar Wych and a Seraphan. Did you realize it was a metal model perched up top there?

Mountain out of Molehills

making tall los-blocking mountains out of foam

DIY Mountains by Grenn Dal

Need some huge line-of-sight blocking terrain to hide from those titans? Want it quick and cheap? Grenn Dal relives the great days of DIY hobby and pink foam with these mountains of rock.

Adding LEDs to Your Model

Adding LED to 40k Tanks

Tank with LEDs by Andrew Dart

I keep planning on adding LEDs to a few of my vehicles and appreciate Andrew’s article on how simple it can be to add lights to your tanks. It’s a great way to add some extra cool to already neat miniatures.

Budget Buildings with Realistic Look

DIY Scratch Built Containers for 40k and Infinity

DIY Containers by Clyde

For those who think they need to buy all sorts of expensive plastic kits to fight over, Clyde reminds us that you can make nice looking terrain from cardboard and plaster. With a little work you can have nice looking containers to block line of sight and fight over.

War Torn Bases

Building war torn bases

Urban Base by The Fantasy Hammer

The model’s base can add drama to the scene or help characters stand out. The Fantasy Hammer out together this nice tutorial on building rubble strew urban bases. By using layers of different material you can build up a nice looking base yourself.

DIY Tyranid Bastion

DIY Converted Tyranid Bastion

Tyranid Bastion by Warhammer39999

What do you do if your army doesn’t have it’s unique terrain kits to build a bastion from? Well, Warhammer39,999 took a toy tree monster and turned it into a massive bio-beast-fortress. With plenty of extra bits and plenty of green stuff this looks great.

Wrap Up

I hope you enjoyed a look back at some of the AMAZING things your fellow hobbyists have done and shared through their blogs. Make sure you visit as many as you can and leave them a comment with your thoughts and encouragement.

And don’t forget the other Good Reads 2016 Collections:

Good Reads 42 by Broken Paintbrush

Good Reads 42 – Hobby Posts You Need to Read

A whole crate load of awesome posts from some of the amazing hobby bloggers out there, this week’s Good Reads 42 brings you some articles that you just don’t want to miss!

Good Reads 42 by Broken Paintbrush

Remember to support you fellow hobby-blogger and check out there work. Also, remember to check out the brand new Blogroll to keep up to date on the latests posts and find new blogs to read – you can even add your blog to the list as well!

A Vengeful Gun

Vengeance Weapon Battery

A Big Gun painted by Siph of Weemen

At some point I need to get more terrain built and painted as I figure it will make easier to start playing again. Here Siph shows off a nicely done Vengeance Weapon platform with a neat trick to switch it from battle cannon to the Punisher Cannon.

DIY Candles for Scenery

Custom Candles for Basing

Candles by Nazroth of Scar Hand Painting

In the gothic world of 40k or craziness of AoS, candles add a nice touch. Nazroth put together a nice tutorial on how he adds tiny candles to his bases – with and without flames. Other than trying to drill a teeny hole in a toothpick, they look super simple to do.

Orruk Ironjawz Brutes

Orruk Irnjawz Brutes in Orange Armor

Orruk Brutes by Amy on Tale of Painters

Not going to lie, I like orks, orcs, and orruks. I also like how Amy paints her Orruks in orange armor, and this squad of brutes is no exception. The orange is bright enough to be interesting without being in your face.

Primarch Humor

Primach Color Humor

Make it So! Image Used without permission but humor by Nick of The Burning Eye

Every wonder about the color choices of the Legions? Nick thinks about what the poor Tech Adept would respond to each Primarch’s selection. Throw in a perfect pairing of Picard memes and prepare for some chuckles.

Alas that is a Nice Figure

Alas Bust

‘Alas’ by Will on Miniatures of Tomorrow

Now that Will is done painting dick monsters, he switched his attention to painting this beautiful sculpt, ‘Alas’ for his wife. You can check out his Tumblr for some of his incredible step-by-step progress as well.

A Blood Pack Too Far

Blood Pact Bio Tank Conversion

Blood Pact Bio Tank by Big Boss Red Skulls

Big Boss Red Skulls has been on a building crazy between INQ28 models, Silver Tower conversions, and now this Blood Pack bio tank monster! Some amazingly creative conversions in there.

Grand Master D Powers

Converted Grand Master Gabriel in Blanche style

Gabriel by D Powers for Marc

Not long ago the talented D Powers started doing commission work and Marc jumped right in with a request for Grand Master Gabriel for his Dark Angels. Let’s just say D didn’t disappoint! Staying true to the Blanch-ian style, this is an incredible conversion.

End of Year Wrap Up

This is the last normal Good Reads of 2016, amazing huh? As I’ve been working on my end-of-year review, I thought about all the Good Reads and amazing posts everyone has accomplished for this year.

So next week, look forward to a massive Good Reads 2016 Edition!

And even more Good Reads to come in 2017.

Broken Paintbrush Blogroll is Live!

This is something I’ve been putting off doing for a while, but I have finally got it done: The Broken Paintbrush Blogroll!

One of the common themes I saw in last week’s discussion on commenting was that many people have lost contact with blog updates since Feiet’s blogroll went down. I know I used to get a good deal of traffic from it that has disapeared.

So, following Thor’s advice, I’ve installed WP RSS Aggregator and added all the blogs I follow (over 150!). You can check it out at: https://www.brokenpaintbrush.com/blogroll. That is where you can also find how to add your own blog to the feed (if I haven’t already added it!).

I am still working on the formatting and sync issues, but I’m hoping that the Blogroll will soon help everyone find new hobby bloggers and connect. If you see funny business, let me know so I can fix it.

Request for a Logo

Also, I am putting a request out for anyone with digital art skills. I need a blogroll badge, and maybe a new logo as well. I’m willing to pay with miniatures!

My current logo isn’t a vector image and has some rough edges. If you are interested, let me know.

A collection of my favorite family board games

My Favorite Board Games

While I haven’t been able to play a game of 40k in many years, I have built up a good collection of board games that I love playing with my family. Some are fun and quick games, others are epic times when family visits for the holidays.

A collection of my favorite family board games

While some of these are more common than others, I’ve added all the games we have played multiple times and really enjoy. A few others have been dudes, or just way too much setup time.

What’s great about most of these games is that they are fairly easy to learn and get playing. This is an important factor with two little boys in the house who want to “help.” 🙂

Note: The links below are affiliate links to Amazon. There is no price difference to you, but I do earn a small commission if you buy it. This is how I pay for hosting services and keep this site alive, so if you want an awesome game and support Broken Paintbrush, I would appreciate the clicks! These games make for great, last-minute gift ideas as well 🙂

Dominion

Dominion Card Game

This was one of the first non-standard ‘board games’ I had ventured into. Dominion is a complex card game that has a dozen or so expansions, each adding a ton of new cards. The rule mechanics are fairly simple, but the vast number of cards make it a very complicated game.

The base game comes with 20+ different card types (think them as unit types). For each game you only use 10 piles, meaning there are tons of combinations of replay available. Throw in a few of the expansions and no two games will ever have the same set of cards.

Get in on Amazon $45 USD

Ticket to Ride

Ticket to Ride Board Game

This is one of those fun/competitive games that everyone can get into because it is so simple to play. The main goal is to build train routes across the map (main game is US, but they have Europe and others too!). You draw victory cards to determine where you need to connect, with coast-to-coast giving you tons of points, and smaller connection giving just a few.

One of the nice things about Ticket to Ride is that it is super quick to set up and learn. So new players don’t get bogged down with learning the rules or waiting for the board to be set up.  On the flip side, it is extremely competitive because there are only so many routes between cities, and if you take one part of it, it can severely mess with another player’s plans.

Grab it on Amazon, $49 USD

Mansions of Madness, 2nd Edition

Mansions of Madness Second Edition

I received Mansions of Madness 1st Ed. last Christmas and have been painting up the models as I enjoyed the game. Then 2nd Ed. dropped and my brother-in-law picked up a copy for me. And in my opinion, they fixed all the challenges I had with the original.

MoM like an RPG on a small scale where you play as an investigator trying to solve the riddle. Each investigator has unique stats and abilities to combat the monsters physically and mentally.

Among the changes in 2nd edition is that you use the free app to play as the DM. Not only does this allow everyone to play together, but it significantly speeds up the setup. The app tells you the single map tile to start with and a few clues as where to go. As you explore, it builds up the map and moves the monsters.

A bit on the pricey side, but it is packed with supplies, and the expansions add new monsters and maps to play.

Grab it on Amazon, $99 USD

Takenoko

Takenoko Panda Board Game

For a fun, light-hearted game, Takenoko is  easy to figure out and has plenty to do. As our family is fans of Kung Fu Panda, the idea of playing a game that uses a panda to eat everything while a poor farmer tries so hard to grow the bamboo is lots of fun.

The game mechanics is somewhat similar to Ticket to Ride in that each player has different victory point cards that fall into three categories: grow a certain color/number of bamboo, eat a certain color/number of bamboo, or build a certain color/placement of map tiles.

Turns go quick and the rules are fairly simple so it’s a great game for that random “let’s play a game.”

Grab it on Amazon, $44 USD.

Eight Minute Empire Legends

Eight Minute Empire Legends

This is a game we picked up by recommendation of a games store. While it takes a bit longer than eight minutes to play, Eight-Minute Empire Legends is a quick and easy game.

The basic premise is to take over as much land as possible with your armies. To aid you with this quest, a pile of monster cards give you extra abilities like moving additional spaces or flying over water.

It works really well as a two player game and scales nicely to four players.

Pick it up on Amazon, $30 USD

Quarto

Quarto Board Game

On the top of the list for quick, two player games is Quarto. It’s a mash-up between tic-tac-toe and Connect Four, but with a very significant twist. The basic idea is to place a piece such that four of one attribute are lined up: tall/short, dark/light, square/circle, flat/divot.

The twist: your opponent selects which piece you play. The first few turns it almost doesn’t matter, but as it comes towards the end, you have to think about what piece to give. And yes, that means you lose the game by selecting the wrong piece to give!

Each game is super quick which makes this my favorite pick for two player games.

Grab it on Amazon: $43

Carcassonne

Carcassonne Board Game

As another land grabbing, world building game, Carcassonne has probably the least player interaction of the games above. The basic premise is that you flip over a tile piece that shows a part of a map. You then connect this tile to the current map such that roads or castles continue.

Your meeples then control different aspects of the tile you put down to gain victory points. The challenge is that you can’t gain those victory points until the section your meeple controls is finished. So if you place him in a castle, it needs to be fully enclosed before scoring the points.

Player interaction comes into play by allowing any player to place a tile where ever on the map. Just about to finish a giant castle? I could add in a castle piece that expands it, delaying your victory.

Grab it on Amazon, $35

Your Favorites

So that’s my list of favorite board games at the moment. While none of these are 40k/AoS related, they are a blast to play with friends or family. Our Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays have become a traditional time to throw down games to see who is the ultimate holiday victor.

What are some of your favorite games? Add them into the comments below as I would love to find other games to add in.

Importance of the Hobby Community

Importance of Community

I had originally titled this post “Why I Comment” but decided there was more to it than just leaving a note on other blogs. Instead, I want to speak of the importance of the community, in particular, the importance of the online hobby community.

Importance of the Hobby Community

As this blog is nearing its 10th birthday, I’ve had a lot of up and downs with both the hobby as well as the blog. The thing that has sustained me through so many low times is the fantastic community of online hobbyists.

Shortly after starting the blog (named 14th Grand Company at the time) I joined an online group doing the Tale of Even More Painters. We had a monthly challenge to paint a particular type of unit for our armies. It was a productive time, but more importantly, it was a chance to build roots into the community.

What got me thinking about all of this, and finally write this post, was one of the responses to a survey I sent to all the Dreadtober participants.

“People not helping other projects along with comments or enthusiasm” – Dreadtober survey participant

This person was disappointed in how little comments and interactions there were on the posts. You could write this off as someone complaining about not getting enough attention, but the truth was, many of the Dreadtober posts I read had zero comments.

Now, I don’t want this post to be a shaming, or even looking for comments myself. Rather, the idea sparked from a post by the famous Greg (greggles). He is famous because he is a prolific commenter. But his reason was simple: he was sad to see so much work being put into posts with no one leaving a comment.

Not leaving it to “somebody else’s problem,” Greg wanted to let as many people know as he could that their work was valued.

Commenting

But why bother? Greg is clearly an amazing individual for taking so much time help people, even through commenting. But for those who think commenting on blogs is dead, not sure why people even bother with it, or maybe even what to say, I’ve put a list together of why I comment and why I love comments on my posts.

0. Congratulate Their Success

When I see a model that has been beautifully put together and painting, I wish I could give them an award (perhaps someday I’ll create the Golden Paintbrush just for that!). The closest I can come instead is to leave them a heartfelt comment on their work.

Even if the model is far from award winning, I love to celebrate each hobbyist’s growth or bravery in trying something new. It’s scary putting your work out there for the world to see, even scarier if you know it looks awful (yes, I’ve deleted many of my old posts for this reason!). Celebrating their success motivates them to continue on.

1. Builds a Community

As with Greg, I try and comment on blogs that I follow. Sometimes it’s as simple as “great work” – though I try to add a bit more depth than that. Other times, I am asking questions or giving tips (usually only if asked for!).

Many of those bloggers reply back (see below), comment on other blogs, or leave comments on mine. As simple as that is, it builds a connected community of people who share a common passion: building and painting miniatures.

You could argue that social media, which I get to later on, is replacing this. And in some ways it is. But when you send a tweet, it disappears in minutes. A comment, on the other hand, is there for others to see when they come across the post years later.

2. Add to the Conversation

Building off of that, a good comment adds to the post and creates a conversation. New readers see the conversation which may help them understand the post even more, or they may add their own voice.

3. Sustain Motivation

When I get comments on posts, especially WIP posts, it helps me maintain motivation to finish it. It’s even better when someone who knows me gives a little prod to finish a project that has been lingering too long.

I look at commenting as a way to pay this forward. Especially if someone is talking about how tough a project is or how real life is draining them. Life happens, but we as a community can support each other to get through those moments.

4. Promotes creativity

Feeling down in your hobby muse? Browsing other hobby blogs is great for finding some inspiration, but I find that if I take the time to leave the person a comment, I look at the models that much more.

What was so eye-catching about that blue? How did they achieve that metal look? What bits are those from? As I said earlier, I don’t like leaving shallow comments, so I really look at the models and find something unique or exceptional that the hobbyist did to comment on.

For me, this sparks some level of creative thoughts for my own projects. Something I can tuck away for later.

5. Build Worldwide friendships

Similar to building a community above, though blog comments I have grown friendships all over the world. Even though we have never met in person, I know that if I find myself in Ireland or Australia there are friends I could call upon to introduce me to the country.

It’s also fun to see what other parts of the world find interesting or when a cultural reference becomes the topic of discussion (what is that nasty pasty thing Aussies eat anyway?).

6. Builds Traffic

I would be amiss if I didn’t at least hit this reason for commenting (Thor and I have written about blogging after all). But notice I put it at the bottom of the list for a reason: if this is the primary focus of commenting, you are spamming.  When I look at my analytics, I find that every day I get traffic from Blogger or Disqus. These are direct links from people looking at my profile on these commenting systems.

Secondary traffic comes from others seeing my comment, recognizing the name and later visiting my site. It is building my “brand” if you will. If anything else, this is a great reason to leave great comments: they may be other’s first impression of you and how you treat others.

Side Note: It’s Important to Reply

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve shared a site with someone and had them say “oh I like that site, too bad they never reply to comments.” The author has taken all that time to write the post, add in some pictures, and put it out there for everyone to see, but then ignore their visitors.

When you look at all the reasons people could leave comments, it’s just as important to them that they feel heard. Even a simple “thanks” or “cheers” acknowledges you heard their voice and appreciate their time in leaving a comment.

Alternatively, if you don’t want comments at all (there are reasons) turn them off. You could instead point people to your social media profile that you are active on.

Social Networks

And that leads into social media such as Twitter, Facebook, and lately, Instagram.

Social is why I changed the name of this post to the importance of community overall. leaving comments is a nice, direct way to interact with the hobby bloggers, but there are many more hobbyists that don’t blog at all.

Signing up for the different networks and getting involved may seem like just one more thing to do, but I have found that you can put as much effort into it as you want to get out of it.

Just as with why I think leaving comments is important, I put together my list of the importance of interacting with the community on social media.

1. See New Things

Too often in life, we get stuck in our own little bubble. Even in our niche of the world of miniature wargaming and miniature painting it can be easy to miss out on new things happening.

One of the great things about the Twitter community is that everyone has unique aspects into the hobby and its branches. If they see something cool, they can retweet it and their followers can see it too. Because of this I have found tons of new blogs to follow, miniature lines with fantastic models, and new painting styles.

The growth of Instagram for our hobby is thanks in part to GW’s #paintingwarhammer tag. My favorite thing about this social media is that it is only pictures, and  most people that post hobby related pictures usually keep it to that. This means that my Instagram feed is full of amazing miniatures.

2. Get or Give Quick Feedback

When you get stuck on something or would like the consensus of the community on a particular topic, it’s super easy to post it to social and see responses roll in. People see it instantly and can respond just as quick, as compared to a blog post which may take days before someone sees it.

3. Ripple Effects

Another cool thing about Twitter is the ability to jump into conversations with your own thoughts. There is an openness there that invites quick and easy interactions. Someone retweets someone’s question and you could jump in with your answer.

This conversation then ripples on as others jump in, retweet your post, or look through the conversation. This again is building your online reputation with people you have never spoken to, but may return the favor and answer one of your questions.

4. Promote

Again, social media is notorious for internet marketers attempting to get your eyeballs and shares. It’s no surprise as it is easy to do and gets results. But it’s also easy to do too much and push people away.

I do use social media to promote my posts, and I follow some of the marketing tips to share each post a few times. But I always try to respect those who follow me and not spam them with endless “CLICK HERE” posts.

5. Share Awesome Things

Which leads me into the other way I use social network: to promote other people’s work.

Let’s say you saw an awesome movie over the weekend, do you share that with all your coworkers on Monday? Then why not do the same with awesome hobby things you find?

This does two things: people who follow you may have never seen it before either and will thank you for showing to them. And the original author get’s additional exposure – building a relationship with them.

Be a Builder

So if I could sum up this entire post, it’s this: be a builder in the community.

Leaving comments is easy, especially on Disqus as you can use Google or Facebook to sign in. But it can do so much for the author, the community, and your own online reputation.

Jump into social media. Thanks to hashtags, it is pretty easy to join into the hobby conversations and get to know others. Share what you are up to and share amazing things with others.

Your Thoughts

I would be remiss if I didn’t finish this post without asking you for your thoughts. Why do you comment, or perhaps, why don’t you comment? What are your favorite comment to receive, what are you least favorite (besides trolls of course)?

Community Question on how to paint black and white

Community Questions: Painting Tips for Black and White

Mixing it up a bit today. Rather than share a post with you, I’m looking for your thoughts on painting the ‘hard’ colors: Black and White.

Community Question on how to paint black and white

As I’ve been building up the blog, I’ll get a ping on Facebook or email with hobby questions, and the one I get the most is how to paint black or how to paint white. Both are hard colors in the sense of highlighting or shading without it looking too harsh.

So I turn to you, my awesome readers. What are your favorite tips for painting black or white? Post them in the comments below so everyone can learn. Have a tutorial as well? Post the link!

Good Reads 41 with Awesome Hobby Content

Good Reads 41

Bringing together some awesome hobby blogs that I have found the last few weeks, Good Reads 41 has some good ones for you. So dive in, check out what your fellow hobby bloggers are up to, and leave them a comment.

Good Reads 41 with Awesome Hobby Content

How To: Chipped Paint

How to Paint Chipped Paint

Tutorial by Scott on The Brush WizardAdding chipped paint to a model is one of the basic ways of adding weathering. It can be as hard as you make it to be, but Scott shows a few steps to take to make them really pop. With only a few extra colors, you can give your models some extra character.

Birth of a Chaos Knight Titan

Chaos Knight Titan

Chaos Knight Titan by Thor of Creative Twilight

Anyone who finishes a Knight Titan deserves an award. And to do one with such incredible degree of details, Thor’s Chaos Knight Titan deserves an extra reward. Named Ironfate, Thor has put an amazing amount of work into painting him.

Converted Gal Vorbak

Converted Gal Vorbak

Gal Vorbak by Eric of PlasticMetalResin

Forge World’s models are epic, and the Gal Vorbak of the Word Bearers are no exception. The problem Eric ran into is that he already had five of them and didn’t want the second five to be copies. So instead, he converted all five Gal Vorbak with subtle changes like tentacles and heads.

Lots of Nurgle Green Stuff

Converted Nurgle Helbrute

Nurgle Helbrute by Svartmetall on Stepping Between Games

Rory is at it again with sharing one of his buddy’s work, this time with Svartmetall and his custom sculpted Nurgle army. There is a serious amount of awesome there that you really need to check out. My favorite is the Helbrute above, but there are a ton of other conversions in there as well.

Trying to Make Snow

Testing out How to do Snow Effects

Snow Tests by The Fantasy Hammer

Add snow to bases is one of the ways to add a story to where the models are fighting. But to make it looks believable can be hard. Wanting to test out some ideas, The Fantasy Hammer built up 8 ‘bases’ and tried different techniques on each. It’s a nice way to try something new.

Chaos Trolls

Converted Chaos Troll

Chaos Troll by GuitaRasmus of Bitter Old Painters

Not happy with the standard Troll models, GuitaRasmus put his crazy-awesome conversion skills to work and built up a trio of Chaos Trolls and a Soul Grinder. Some amazing creativity in these models and all those extra limbs.

Wrap Up

I hope you liked this week’s collection of Good Reads. If you like the Good Reads posts, you will love my weekly newsletter. It combines the most recent Broken Paintbrush posts with some other favorites from the hobby web archives.

So many hobby bloggers have amazing articles deep in the noosphere and the Brush Stroke is my attempt to revive the ones I find. So sign up in the box below and get more hobby goodness.