Jump to content
  • entries
    7
  • comments
    11
  • views
    5717

Hello folks! :smile:

I've been wanting to start wih something nice and smooth. Something about my hobby way or history but in the end I just couldn't get to it properly. So instead I chose to start with where I am at the moment.

I own a considerable force of Blood Angels - my first 40k love. I have around 12.000 pts worth of painted models and a solid chunk of those is my 5th Company, the Daemonbanes. It's almost ready barring a few bodies and I plan to showcase them here slowly while I update their paintjob.

Speaking of paintjob, here is my latest achievement: Las-Fusil Eliminators. Totally not 5th Company, but Blood Angels definitely:
large.ekipa2.jpg.22997dd1cb01f0dbbf9c504

 

Spoiler

large.ekipa1.jpg.ab052b6142fad94be8309fc


They are the fruit of my pondering on the topic of camouflage and alternative color schemes for a really colorful chapter that Blood Angels actually are. I wanted to keep the flashiness of Blood Angels armor and color-scheme but adapted to necessities of war and fuction

They do have some trinkets and ornaments, they do show glimpses of the vibrant Chapter iconography and their own personal heraldry, they do have quite some amounts of red on them. But I think I managed to thread a fine balance between those and the covert-ops feel of the Phobos armoured marines in general and Eliminators in particular.

They utilize a neat trick of camouflage activation/deactivation which allowed me to show that they can be both worlds at the same time. Some battle-damage also helps those to blend. 


If anyone is interested in the effect by the way, I did a short tutorial here on B&C on how I approached the camouflage activation/deactivation effect: 

 

Edited by Majkhel

2 Comments


Recommended Comments

Captain Caine 24th

Posted

Very cool. I'll check out that tutorial. I've been mulling over the las-fusils for a while, especially with points decreases. 

Colors here are great. I think especially for miniatures/models being viewed on a table top, making them stand out adds something that might not be apparent on a close-up view. No less important, there's real points for originality. 

Look forward to seeing the rest of the 12,000pts.

Majkhel

Posted

Cheers, Captain! :biggrin:
Thanks for kind words!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.