Wwen wrote:
I know some of you guys have played some warhammer. I was looking for some beginners advice on painting the army.
Beginner's advice: come to grips with the fact that your models will
not look like the ones in official pictures.
After you've come to grips with that, keep painting. Practice makes perfect.
Wwen wrote:
what basic materials I even need.
Super-duper ultra basic?
Spray primer: I believe you're playing Orcs IIRC, so I'd go with black. This is because paints are not 100% opaque, and so some of each underlying color comes through. As such, white makes models much brighter in the end than black. "Bright" and "Orcs" don't go together. Also, white is harder for beginners to spray prime, because it takes a very particular touch to get it everywhere on the model, and with white
must get everywhere or the final model won't look good. Black isn't quite as important to get into the nooks and crannies, though you still want to ensure good coverage.
Some brushes: I don't put nearly the emphasis on quality as Khross does. You're going to **** up brushes. Get over it. Replace them as soon as they start to fray or the tip to curl. You'll need several sizes. The Games Workshop starter set is overpriced, but a good start. In theory, you could probably get away with a #1 brush for a long time by itself.
A painting surface: Newspaper, a plastic tray, etc. Something you don't care about spilling things on.
Plastic cups: Put water in these for brush cleaning.
Paints: Use ACRYLIC. Otherwise you'll need thinner to dilute, thinner to clean, and overall just have a worse time of it. GW are expensive but go with well the official painting guides and look good. I like Vallejo more, as Kaffis said, but then you'll pretty much have a mixing tray as another requisite, because their squirt-topped bottles mandate it.
Minimum paints are: Black, white, a metallic (either Chainmail or Boltgun metal, or their equivalent), and two primary colors for your army (your choice). Get "foundation" colors to start with, as these cover black phenomenally well. Later, you can get lighter/darker shades of each paint, plus more colors for detail work. Washes will also really step up your quality, Devlan Mud and Badab Black being the two most heavily used. You can use the black/white to mix colors up and done and save money. If money isn't an issue, get not only the 2 foundation colors you need, but a couple lighter colors of the same range (so if you get Orkhide shade Foundation, also pick up Goblin and Snot green, for example), this will allow you to easily highlight.
Vallejo offers color equivalents of both Foundation and Wash ranges of GW products, and while the same price their bottles are bigger by ~5ml, so effectively about 35% cheaper.
Wwen wrote:
What I have available locally is Testor's. I'm holding off on deciding for the meantime.
Unless the Testor's is acrylic, and usually it isn't, don't get it. Enamel is a pain in the gonads to work with.
It sounded like you were just asking for painting tips, if you want assembly as well that's fine, just let me know.
When it comes to spray technique, all brands will have an optimal distance from the model. Experience will help you learn this, but it's usually 6-18 inches. Remember when spraying that multiple thinner coats are better than one thick-ass one, except when sealing the model later.
Assuming I'm correct in your having Orcs, follow these steps and you'll be tournament-minimum ready and have a decent "tabletop quality" army:
1) Spray black
2) Green Foundation the ork skin
3) Wash Ork skin green
4) Leave wash in recesses and hit up with Goblin/medium green
5) Brown foundation on clothes/shirts
6) Brown wash (Devlan mud)
7) Either leave brown as is, or hit with Snakebite leather/medium brown, leaving wash in recesses
8) Slightly thinned boltgun metal/metallic on metal parts
9) Second thinned coat of metallic for coverage if necessary
10) black wash on metallic areas
After that, you could base them and be done. Everything else would be highlights and additional colors for details.