Just an update on painting figures. I've done a few, but these are the ones I've done just this year, which seems a nice starting point to measure from.
This started with me painting the two pack mules I got for Christmas. Then I remembered I had the oxen, and then thought "I should really get these horses done too..."
So it turned into a Livestock painting session!
I also had the Mexican cowboy just sitting there, so I worked on him as well.
With those done, I moved on and finished these two cowboys for TheDeep: Mine. The reverend I've had for awhile. I replaced his right open hand with a sawed-off shotgun (since he's otherwise unarmed). The woman was part of a set I got for my birthday. It's a nice figure, though why she's wearing a suit vest without a shirt I don't know. Today that would be called "daring". In the 1870's I think they had another word for women dressing like that, but she's armed to the teeth, so likely no one uses it around her.
I think they all came out pretty nice. The second picture doesn't show the highlights they have in real life, but I didn't want to spend too long taking the shot.
I also completed some street thugs, a couple monsters for TheDeep: Mine, and a couple of Supers, but I did't think to take photos of them.
On the table now are still more Mine critters and some Pulp sci-fi figures. Also natives, robots, and a starfighter. I am quite diverse.
This started with me painting the two pack mules I got for Christmas. Then I remembered I had the oxen, and then thought "I should really get these horses done too..."
So it turned into a Livestock painting session!
I also had the Mexican cowboy just sitting there, so I worked on him as well.
With those done, I moved on and finished these two cowboys for TheDeep: Mine. The reverend I've had for awhile. I replaced his right open hand with a sawed-off shotgun (since he's otherwise unarmed). The woman was part of a set I got for my birthday. It's a nice figure, though why she's wearing a suit vest without a shirt I don't know. Today that would be called "daring". In the 1870's I think they had another word for women dressing like that, but she's armed to the teeth, so likely no one uses it around her.
I think they all came out pretty nice. The second picture doesn't show the highlights they have in real life, but I didn't want to spend too long taking the shot.
I also completed some street thugs, a couple monsters for TheDeep: Mine, and a couple of Supers, but I did't think to take photos of them.
On the table now are still more Mine critters and some Pulp sci-fi figures. Also natives, robots, and a starfighter. I am quite diverse.
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