Repaintings from start to finish
You may have noticed how I've pondered a bunch of times to repaint all of my old energy weapons. One of these afternoons, on a somehow annoying day, after the workday was done, I decided to do something enjoyable with the hour I had all for myself. Spoiler alert: after a bit of tinkering I felt good again.
I spent some time rummaging through my CGL boxes and my hunch was wrong: only the Clan box OmniMechs and the Shilone were unjeweled. I had truly been prepared to paint a good bunch more, but on this one afternoon it was a perfect amount. Of course I had a couple of dozen of IWM minis to be repainted, but that wasn't going to be done in one random hour.
Before getting any further I checked the specs from TRO and Sarna, so I'd get a correct amount of proper lenses per miniature. A bit later I realized that I had forgotten the Jump Jets, that I painted as the last item on the list, after also checking the specs before touching a drop of paint.
Grendel
The Grendel had a good amount of paintables for me: one large, three mediums and a small one. Sillily in the stock pose the miniature's Right Arm was pointing downwards which hid 40% of the lenses when looking at the mini from a gaming angle.
This set of minis only had one of the Extended Range flashlights and that lived in the Right Arm of this Grendel. Because it wasn't the large pipe, the only option was the bit above it. The bit that I had decided to act as the rangefinder of Grendel A's AC.
The red paint was, in addition to be reserved for the difficultly tiny ERSLas lens, a good paint for the viewports of the five OmniMechs, so I also repainted all of their cockpits. They'd show up on their photos in turn, as I didn't take separate cockpit painting photos. I actually took no work in progress photos of any of the subparts in this miniproject, now that I thought of it.
This time I knew to paint the green lens on Grendel's forehead, to compensate for my ignorance (or lack of accuracy) two years ago, to compound with my stupidities starting with that ERSLas mentioned above. The whole ERMLas tripled got the exact same Escorpena Green treatment.
I've grumbled a lot about Grendel's pose, but I felt that despite that I managed decently with the Magical Blue lense and its anime effect. Sadly it wasn't visible on the tabletop.
No surprises here: the JJ nozzles were a bit odd, and I guess I could've thinned my blues down a bit more for a smoother transitionset. They worked better seen from a more respectful distance, which was a good thing.
Puma
Not much to redo for the Puma, just the ERPPCs that I had earlier apparently left untouched. What could explain that? Maybe I had used a blue wash that just didn't show up too clearly after flashing.
ER PPC
Like I said, I had already painted the windows while working on Grendel's small laser jewel, so at least we had something else to show next to the Particle Projection Cannons. Unlike with the laser lenses, I tried to get a more central concentration for the glow effect. To my bare eyes they looked better than on the camera's viewpoint, but then again, what didn't?
Executioner
Again this fugly monstrosity was in my hands. While admiring the "before" photo, it was a perfect moment to praise a painting resource I encountered around the end of the summer: Camospecs Canon cockpit painting compendium, vol 1. That one showed me that the Executioner's cockpit windows weren't quite as Atlaslike as I had thought but the middle panel was a window as well, not armour.
ER Large Laser
Here my jeweling looked clearly better than in the photo right above, especially as these nicely warned of the weapon's class. Also the missing viewport was painted correctly and I could sleep my nights better.
Jump Jet
The mere thought of an Assault like this jumping around, even if for short distances, was disturbing.
Timber Wolf
I was positively looking forward to work on the Timber Wolf, even if I still wasn't going to put my hands into the wrong-looking LRM warhead caps.
ER Large Laser x2
Looking at these photos the Timber Wolf's ER Large Lasers were otherwise great, but especially on the RA edge had some old red stains ruining the full image. Maybe I'd poke them with a mix of dark grey + red, and turn the messy paintjob into a fresh and totally purposeful chipping.
ER Medium Laser x2, Medium Pulse Laser
The medium-class laser's brighter shade wasn't that much different from my base, unlike what I expected. That meant that the jewel effect ended up being a bit gentler than I intended. The barrels were also quite small, so there wasn't that much space for my sausages to fine-control a tiny brush.
Nova
The tubery that resurfaced vivid memories of Marko's "ALPHA STRIKE!" exclamations looked a bit intimidating, but it was just two sets of six each, so how much time could they require? Especially considering my painting skills.
ER Medium Laser x12
A dozen laser lenses were jeweled much quicker than what I feared. Waiting for the next red-hot and semi-suicidal alpha strike...
Jump Jet
My third and last jump-capable 'Mech was pretty easily nozzled up. I liked to paint this shape of JJ nozzles than the ones on Grendel, for example, even if those kinda looked more like the part.
Shilone SL-17
When I started I only intended to paint the three lasers, as I had been content with the cockpit. I actually had to search for the LL for a bit and I had to admit that I needed to check its location from Sarna to get the correct piece painted.
Large Laser
The laser lived comfortably between the sensorsets, right next to the cockpit. The nub for the laser was pretty small, and a bit difficult to paint comfortably, but now it looked more like a lense than before.
Medium Laser x2, cockpit
Did you guess already? My original canopy set was just plain green, so while I was already painting jeweling on the Medium Lasers in the wings, I also did the three viewport panels. That round one on top was like a big lens, so I just followed my usual jewel method. Those rectangular ones got a more or less L-shaped things on them, where the brightest reflections were aligned with the centerline of the frame.
The lower front pane immediately reminded me of a Lego computer and that was always a good thing. I wish I knew how to do something like that on purpose instead of accident...
Group photo
I took a quick shot of the bits standing abreast facing this way and that way. The cockpits looked generally improved, and I really liked that the energy weapons were clearer and they also brought a tiny bit of variation into the camo-schemed miniatures.
Individual photos
I did shoot a set of these photos of the sextet, while I was taking the final photos of V/24 in the same run. One of each, here ya go:
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