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Made in us
Fresh-Faced New User





Morning everyone. I am in the process of painting some Space Marine test figures, and I am running into a slight problem. How in the world can you paint the eyes without feeling like you are going blind? Such a small surface area and I am seeing some outstanding work from other users, but when I look at my figures, I am not seeing any way to paint such a small area without messing up the surrounding area.
Well, that's my weekly rant. If I get suggestions the more the better!
   
Made in jp
[MOD]
Anti-piracy Officer






Somewhere in south-central England.

Well this is a Painting question so the best place to get an answer is the Painting & Modelling Forum, where eyes come up quite often in fact.

I shall move it forthwith.

I'm writing a load of fiction. My latest story starts here... This is the index of all the stories...

We're not very big on official rules. Rules lead to people looking for loopholes. What's here is about it. 
   
Made in us
Fresh-Faced New User





Sorry about that, thanks.
   
Made in gb
Yellin' Yoof




London

I tend to do the base coat for the eyes after the primer, do the details using a really thin arts pen if they are not to deeply set to negate the effect then paint the skin around them to allow me to easily shape the eyes then add the shades, wash, glaze depending what I am doing after that.

Sure everyone does it differently, but I find this the least stressful and least likely to cause errors, so I suppose eyes are always the first thing I paint oddly

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2014/05/22 15:39:37


Green is Best!  
   
Made in gb
Brigadier General





The new Sick Man of Europe

I only do eyes if they are prominent on the actual sculpt, but then I do the eyes and flesh basecoat in one go so I don't paint over anything.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2014/05/22 15:46:42


DC:90+S+G++MB++I--Pww211+D++A++/fWD390R++T(F)DM+
 
   
Made in gb
Yellin' Yoof




London

 sing your life wrote:
I only do eyes if they are prominent on the actual sculpt, but then I do the eyes and flesh basecoat in one go so I don't paint over anything.


Yes I agree with this a lot, I tend to only hint at eyes on models such as space marines as they tend to be deep set. Something like a Dark Elf Sorcerer though they are prominant and worth doing well.

To hint I just throw Seraphim Sephia in there follow by a small amount of blood for the blood god just to give a red tint, sometimes worth covering it with a bit of nuln oil to stop it being shiney, but it helps to stop your daftly helmetless marines looking eyeless.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2014/05/22 16:04:13


Green is Best!  
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Burtucky, Michigan

Another simple trick, is to prime, paint the eyes first THEN paint the armor color around the eye lens. That way you can be sloppy on the eyes, going out of the lines and such, and simply clean it up with the marines armor color.
   
Made in gb
Dakka Veteran





UK

It will come with practice but for somebody starting out the easiest way, is to do the eyes first as mentioned. That way you can mess it up without wrecking the whole model. An insane small brush and strong light source helps as well.

Old warriors die hard

https://themodelwarrior.wordpress.com
 
   
Made in us
Fresh-Faced New User





You guys have been a big help. Since I am airbrushing the base colors I am going to have to work out the tips you all have passed along, but that is al part of the fun, yes?
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending




Sydney

Prime, do the eyes, maskol them, paint?

Really though, I relearnt how to paint minis with the hobbit set, those dudes are tiny. Doing space Marines now is easy.

I put down a layer of black, then a layer of white leaving an outline, then a thin vertical line. A decent brush, from the side and there is little you can ruin. But even then, touching up flesh isn't hard, and surely you aren't painting eyes on the helmets?

The vertical line is the hard bit, but thinned paints help a lot.

On helmets I am seriously considering doing the glowing eyes trick for some ba terminators I have next
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut





USA

For the more advanced eye, I recently posted an article on the Discount Game Inc Blog that talks about painting eyes.

http://www.discountgamesinc.com/blog/the-hobby-corner-15/

A.

   
Made in ca
Irked Necron Immortal






Halifax, NS

also having a modelling lamp helps a ton. I have a posable one that has a magnifying glass built into it so I use that when I'm getting down to really fine details

 
   
Made in us
Fresh-Faced New User





Eventually I am going to have to learn how to paint the eyes. For the helmets I am finding the lens is still pretty small, but I believe that had more to do with the color of the basecoat and the lighting I was using. (Was not at my model building desk)
   
Made in us
Space Marine Scout with Sniper Rifle



Salt Lake City

For small models and details I just bought a pair of 2x and 3x reading glasses. I find it more flexible than the mounted magnifier glass.
   
 
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