So, I am a slow painter. Getting better a little at a time. But still pretty slow. Probably the #1 thing that slows me down is color paralysis. I always seem to get stuck at the detailing step. There's just so many little beeps and boops on models that I feel compelled to hit with a little paint because it's obviously a separate
thing. But then I kind of get brainlock trying to figure out what color makes sense there. Is that a metallic knob? Is it a little light? Should it just remain a small square slab the same color as the surrounding base coat? How do I choose a color that provides enough contrast to pop out without being out of place? Does it even matter if that minor wedge of....whatever gets it's own color? There's certainly some elements of OCD there.
All this adds up to tons of stoppages and "oh, I'll get to that tomorrow"s.
How do you guys deal with this? Some painters (especially youtube pros) seem to just have a very natural eye for what color everything should be and putting the paint on is just a mechanical step in the middle. They see it all up front in their heads and everything else is just detail.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNaXQQbcgw0
I guess I'm kind of like Salieri, but I want to be more like Mozart, and at least
some of that has to be learnable. Suggestions?