Hobby Cheating 266 - Universal Highlight Colors
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- čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
- In this Hobby Cheating video I take you through Universal highlight colors. We are starting the journey with caucasian flesh tones, a wonderful color you can use to highlight almost anything achieving naturalistic tones and smoother blends. Hope you enjoy!
Twitter: @warhammerweekly
Instagram: VincentVenturella
Email: WarhammerWeeklyQuestions@gmail.com
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Your content is better than actual art school. These videos help so much!
Thank you, I very much appreciate that.
I'm no artist, and my limited knowledge and skills have only been bettered by the content in your vids...
my figure painting (1/35s mostly) has vastly improved in a very short time due to your most excellent videos, explanations, and samples
keep doing what you do, sir... in my opinion, yours is truly THE single most helpful channel on YT for figure painting, color exercises, and examples
That is awesome! Thank you. :)
have been watching a lot of your playlist for 'hobby cheating' today. I think less 'cheating' and more a refreshingly open approach to de-obsfuscating a skill. Thank you for being so generous
Thank you, always happy to help. :)
...with GREEN? But that's a cold color! That can't...Wow! The Madman! It works! Now do *goes through spectrum wheel in his head* blue and purple! OH MY GOD, HE DOES IT!
Indeed, it works for everything. ;)
I wasn't as surprised with green as I was with violet. If you look at the color wheel, using yellow to highlight green makes a lot of sense. Not so intuitive to me was the idea of using it to brighten violet!
Awesome!
@@bpronka In this case, the red parts of the orange blend well with the violet. Because of course they would.
After Jon mentioned this on Trapped Under Plastic, I’m happy to see an in depth example like this.
Yes, I thought that was ironic when I watched Jon's video and knew this was scheduled out. :)
Same
They call Vince a painting wizard, finally he gives us some of that magic. Won't say I fully understand but can't argue one bit with the results.
Awesome, happy to help as always. :)
"You're my boy, blue" - Now that's what I call painting Old School!!
Love this. ;)
Pro tip: you can watch series at Flixzone. Me and my gf have been using it for watching all kinds of movies these days.
@@maxwellonyx9559 Thanks, I'll check it out.
@Maxwell Onyx yup, I have been watching on flixzone for since december myself :)
@Maxwell Onyx Yea, been using flixzone for years myself :D
Great recommendation!
I'd love to see you do a couple of videos to pair with your universal highlight and shadow entries, that cover universal cold highlights and warm shadows. Great video here Vince. Hope you're doing well!
Great idea!
Great video! "your my boy blue!"
Blowing my mind here. Need to try this some time.
Awesome, always happy to help. :)
One of your more mind-blowing videos. Thanks Vince!
This is a good demonstration of how naming conventions in miniature paints are guidelines rather than absolutes, everything still ultimately confers to the colour spectrum. Great tutorial, as usual :).
Glad it was helpful!
This is pure genius. Flesh tone to highlight. Mind blown. 💥💥💥 I learn so much from these hobby cheating videos.
Awesome, happy to assist.
I’m really loving your work! Thanks for everything you do!
Glad you enjoy it!
Never would have thought to do this...amazing! Thank you for sharing with us!
Glad it was helpful!
Amazing video, I learn so much from you. Thanks Vince!!
Glad to hear it!
I'm really impressed. I kinda expected you to use some kind of cold secondary highlight tones for the colder spectrum of colors. I didn't expect the flesh tone to be so universally effective
Yep, it just works with everything. :)
Thank you sir. You're a wizard. This helps me a bunch on some upcoming projects.
Glad to help
Yet another great video! I never thought of highlighting anything with colors anywhere near this!
Glad it was helpful!
Man this has opened up some amazing possibilities! I cant wait to grab a brush after work and try this. Thank you for these videos.
Happy to help!
This was incredibly helpful! Thanks so much, Vince!
Glad it was helpful!
Fantastic info as always. A true painting pioneer.
Thank you. :)
Thank you so much Vince! Nice tips and demostrations! :D
My pleasure!
I have always struggled with highlighting my miniatures and I am so excited to try this out! Thank you so much for the information :)
Glad it was helpful!
The purple blend was crazy good! Thanks so much for another great video 👊
Glad you liked it!!
Eye opening. Love those smooth transitions!
Glad you liked it!
Your my boy blue! Cracked me up. Good video as usual Vince. 👍
Glad you enjoyed :)
Brilliant, as always! Will have to give this a try
Always happy to help. :)
Saw the title and instantly knew I was going to like this video.
Recently I've been doing this a bit after I think watching something like the old hobby cheating red video? With all the talk of flesh tones as a warm highlight colour.
Been loving using it for browns and reds, any sort of warm tone. Look forward to watching the vid and learning even more.
Always love the content, keep up the great work.
Thank you, always happy to help. ;)
I've used Light Flesh for blending/highlighting purples before but never thought to try it on any other colors. Love these videos!
You are welcome! :)
Lovely! I've been using light fleshtone in many color mixes but I was still slowly on my way to thinking of a more caucasian fleshtone for some mixes. I love the velvet feel of the purple, for sure! Thank you, Vince.
Glad it was helpful!
You're a pro dude. Looking forward to getting an iowata airbrush for Christmas and getting started painting my Khorne and anvilguard armies soon! Going to be watching a heck of a lot more of your painting videos.
Awesome, happy to help as always. :)
Awesome! Great to see this, I learn so much from your vids
Glad to hear it! Always happy to help. :)
Thanks again for the content! Always a great resource.
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@VinceVenturella Yeah man, I actually used this today. I find that the color "flat flesh" from Vallejo works a lot like sunny skin tone. BTW, I try to send anyone who asks about a subject to your channel. Thanks for the time you put into your stuff.
Fantastic info. I'm going to try it out immediately! Thanks again Vince!
Always happy to help.
@@VinceVenturella Your videos have inspired me to restart painting after 25 years. I hope you realize how much your videos mean to some people.
@@mrsoylentgreen79 Thank you, that means a great deal to me and I am always happy to help.
Great video mate . I have started collecting Vallejo metal colour so looking forward to try some out on my next Models as I have only used citadel up now 👍🏻👍🏻
Awesome, it's a big change. :)
Wow! That's a real game changer, I can't believe how effective that is. I think this is going to really improve my highlights as I've always had really stark obvious blends and have always used white to mix.
Glad it was helpful!
I really like your colours studies/examples Vince. Please keep this up! (and carry on the secondary colour exploration series as well :D )
Thanks, will do!
Last week I was painting reddish purple hair with violet shadows. Then for the highlight, to my surprise, I instinctively reached to such skin stone to mix in.
Now I know that I can apply that to everything!
Thank you Vince
Thank you, always happy to help. :)
Vince, you are an international treasure. As always, thank you
My pleasure! :)
Got both colors and never tried that ! Thanks I will certainly do now :)
Excellent, happy to help as always. :)
Great stuff friend, you have taught me so much 🤙😎
Glad to help
Talk about the right advice at the right time. I've got a red project I've been putting off because I couldnt figure out the high highlights. Everything I tried in tests was too orange or too pink, and screwing up the deep red I'd established. Seeing that shield I was like 'holy shit that's it!'
I owe you a beer cowboy! Thank you very very much.
Awesome, happy to help as always. :)
Now that is a very useful video, thank you for that one!
Glad it was helpful!
Wow, ok. That made highlighting purple and blending it so much easier. Thanks, you really deserve to have more views!
Glad it helped! :)
About to work on some purple cloaks so this is really helpful!
Excellent, happy to help. ;)
Thnx again vince. Good information!
My pleasure!
Dude these videos are super helpful thank you!
Happy to help!
This is awesome, thanks for this!
No problem! :)
Thank you very much. Love this tutorial
You're very welcome!
That is some wonderful looking blue, now i know what i want to do with that large scarf.
Yep, these kinds of blends can be great for cloth.
Yup. Sunny Skintone is a great go-to. Also incredible "works everywhere" highlight colors? VMC Ice Yellow and VMC Deck Tan/ Scale Nacar.
Yep, all great, I would also add glacier blue to the mix.
Kimera paints are so great to mix with!
They are! Just really a pleasure honestly.
Very nice effect, Vince.
Glad you like it!
Vince, you’ve officially BLEW MY MIND with this one.
Always happy to help. :)
I am amazed thanks.
Glad you liked it! :)
Why had no one taught me this?! I’ve been struggling with either highlighting colors like red into oranges and yellows, or desaturating them with whites. This is so interesting and helpful, thanks Vince!
Glad I could help!
Great video!
Glad you enjoyed it. :)
I've been using AKs Ice Yellow for highlighting everything and it's been working a treat.
Yep, that's another color that can fill this same purpose for sure. :)
Thhanks Vince. I recently moved to Ivory for highlighting up colours, but I will try to use your bolder approach with sunny skin tone next, seems really good from the Video.
Glad it was helpful!
funny, just what i did with my squigs. flat red as main color and flat + sunny as drybrush highlight. looking goooood
Yep, it's just a wonderful natural highlight.
This was a fantastic video Vince, thank you so much! Do you have any plans to continue the series with other good universal highlight color combinations?
Yep, I want to cover this in more detail in the future.
Sunny Skintone came in a Vallejo WW2 German set and now I know what to use it for. Thanks Vince!
Always happy to help. :)
I love the Old School reference
Heading to the Quad later. :)
Hi Vince, great stuff, as always. Mostly thanks to you I incorporated universal highlights a while ago to good results and have been experimenting with it quite a bit. When would you give a skintone the edge over something like Ice Yellow or an Ivory for example? I would love to hear your tgought process on this one. All the best!
It's just really about the environment of the piece. When you're setting the highlights, you are setting the color of the environment, so I am generally looking to match it to that. Sunny Skin Tone is just a nice highlight for your normal sunny day.
Sunny skin tone is a must have color for any modeling subject matter. It's probably my most used color. It works great for getting brighter highlights without completely desaturating the base color. I have versions of sunny skin tone in acrylic, oil and for airbrushing I prefer Tamiya paints. And so I use their flat flesh, which works the same. Also a great color substitute for white when it comes to zenithal pre shading
Agreed on all counts. :)
@@VinceVenturella Used more than Ice Yellow?
Hey Vince, I'm very curious when you are going to be doing a universal shadow tutorial! I have been using this technique now and it is so mush smoother for highlighting and looks more natural!
Thank you so much for the massive amount of influence you've had on the miniature painting community
You won't have to wait long at all. :)
@@VinceVenturella oh snap...
thanks vince, i just happen to be doing the hair for skaeth's wild hunt (underworlds gang), i'll give it a try.
Fantastic, always happy when people can put it to use.
So nice. :)
I have been using these flesh tones more and more, started out with using them on reds and browns. Now I will try it with everything. :)
I started out using it for leather cause, well leather is skin so it felt like a thing :P
Awesome, yeah, it's so multipurpose. :)
So Sunny Skintone IS the key to those smooth, creamy blends we're all after when highlighting! This is what I've been wondering and now can put that paint to good use too!
Happy to help. :)
Wow! Sunny skin tone looks like a great tool
Yep, it's such a wonderful color.
This video was really helpful, thanks! I do have a quick somewhat related question. I bought the big box of all the Scale75 paints and it has for example 4 or 5 different reds. If you have access to something like that, would you tend to highlight with the different reds as they are in the bottles? Or pick a "base" red tone you like then mix in the sunny skin tone for highlights? I guess the core of the question is does this sunny skin tone method replace needing to buy the 5 different reds, or does it produce a vastly different result?
I would generally pick one of the reds in teh tone I want and mix in Sunny Skin Tone from there. There are different results, but this will be more true to environmental lighting.
Awesome, thanks, that helps. I've recently switched over from GW paints and the GW painting style and my biggest issue so far has been trying to learn how to deal with paints not coming as nice sets of base/shade/highlight/highlight.
Again another excellent video Vince. Thank you very much! How would you go if you wanted to have a cold highlight for your blue tho for let's say a moonlit scene for example?
So the same rules apply to other colors such as Ice Yellow or Glacier blue and that last one is the answer. You can use Glacier Blue in the same way with any color.
@@VinceVenturella Oh, this is interesting. Makes the tip in this video even more useful.
@@VinceVenturella Thanks!
great vid
Thank you, always happy to help. :)
Sapere aude. Great stuff
Thank you, happy to help. :)
Wow... I need to do this
It's wonderful for sure. :)
Just painted some purple flames you werent kidding. Purple is hard to blend! Now the question is do I go back and redo them with what I learned here lol.
Well, there are always future miniatures. :)
Hey Vince, two questions, if you'd be so kind: 1) is Sunny Skin Tone a color we could zenithal highlight with, instead of white? And 2) is there an equivalent COOL universal highlight color?
1) yes
2) glacier blue
Great vid! Thx! Question- would this work with grays, pinks, or metals? I plan to try this but thought you might have done this already! Also who makes the best skin tone paint to do this with? Thx for help!
Grays, Pinks yes, metals, no. Mixing matte paints with metals isn't going to really end well for highlights (you can do it for shadows). Anything like Sunny Skin tone will work fine.
Vince, I recently watched your working with red video and this is a great update. I have a lot of redcoats to paint and want to have an easy way to highlight rank and file soldiers as well as paint up officers who have scarlet vs flat (madder) red. I have had satisfying initial results with your warm highlight and red over glaze technique. So using glaze over warm highlights vs warm highlight mixed with base base are just two methods to the same goal of nicely highlighting reds? When would you specifically use one versus the other? Thanks so much!
They are both getting you at the goal of a nice warm highlight. That being said, it would depend on the goal. So if you wanted a pure bright red, you would use the undercoating thing, if you are wanting the more desaturated red, you mix them. Hope that helps.
@@VinceVenturella Do you think that the glaze method is faster and more forgiving when painting large bodies of troops? I agree that it is more saturated.
That seems like a nice idea, and I'm eager to test it.
One thing I don't understand, though: wouldn't adding an orange-ish color desaturate greens (due to the red component), blues and violet (due to the yellow component)? Is that deliberate? I mean, adding white would also desaturate in itself...
On an unrelated note, I'm glad you're starting to use monopigments such as Kimera colors more, and appreciate them. When I switched to artist paints, it really helped me understand colors a lot more.
The violet you mention, dioxazine violet, is the basis of basically every purple and violet you've ever seen (outside of magenta-ish colors, or very high profile oil paints), and it's usually heavily diluted with white in miniature paints (try looking at it on the palette near, say, hexed lychen). It's amazing, and I keep fiding more uses for it -- I love using it for a vibrant shade, especially on reds. The highly-pigmented Kimera version is probably even better.
It will desaturate the colors in a more natural way. What I mean by that is the white would not only desaturate, but it will also more strongly tint the color. So it's making the color much weaker. The skin tone desaturates, but it adds hue and richness, and doesn't necessarily make the tinting as strong.
@@VinceVenturella Thank you, this helps me understand. I'll look for some sacrificial model to use as guinea pig... Also, "tinting" was the word I was looking for, thanks for reminding me.
Hey Vince, any recommendations on a flat-finish spray varnish (don't have an airbrush)? Do you care at all about the slight shine on some matte varnishes (like dullcote), or do you go for that ultra-matte look?
Testor's Dullcote is about the best out of a can, AK or Mig both make an Ultra Matte Varnish.
Well, this was absolutely invaluable. Time to go get some AK in my collection. Well, one colour at least perhaps. 🤣
Yep, if that's tough, you can also do Sunny Skin Tone from Vallejo.
@@VinceVenturella Thanks! I was wondering about that. Vallejo seems a bit darker but that might be my monitor, I cant find AK in Japan for some reason.
Hi Vince, if I had a model that was primarily blues/purples/and pinks. But I also have some black leather would using a sunny skin tone mixed into the first highlight of black/grey still be the way to go or would something like ice yellow be a better choice? Or should I stay in the neutral grey realm. I'd like to have some decent contrast on the black while not distracting from the other colors on the miniature.
As always love your content.
ANy of those could work just fine, it's more about the environmental light you're going for. Frankly, you could use any or all of those colors across all 3 of those tones.
Hey Vince! Sorry to come into here one year after this video was published. I recently started painting minis and your videos have been invaluable! I bought some Vallejo Sunny Skin Tone follwing the advice in this video, but I noticed that it looks much more orange-red in real life compared to what shows on screen, where it reads more like a yellow with a bit of an orange undertone. I was wondering if this is just an issue with my screen, or if Vallejo maybe changed its formulation of this color? As it is, the color I bought seems not very well suited for highlighting, or application to any sort of sandy desert like I saw you do in your Tomb Kings chariot video.
They may have changed the formula (or that bottle could even be different, there are often variations in paint). In any event, any neutral to bright caucasian skin tone will work for this purpose from any producer.
omg, I intuited something! I do this!
Awesome, happy to help and glad you're already on the train. :)
love the video, and I now have sunny skin tone on my shopping list! what's the purple that you use in the video though?
Kimera Violet.
@@VinceVenturella ah thanks vince. Is it pretty similar to Vallejo Violet?
@@willroberts2152 CLose-ish, its more intense and it's single pigment, but something like Vallejo Royal Purple would be close enough.
@@VinceVenturella much appreciated, thanks. I'll try Royal Purple 🙂
I have been teached! Tnx
Happy to help Dicey. :)
Hey Vince! Thanks for sharing this video! Question, is the Barbarian Flesh from Army painter the equivalent of Sunny skin tone?
It's probably pretty close, any warm flesh tone like that is a good candidate.
Great video. Did you make a video for a universal "Shadow" color?
Yep - czcams.com/video/cD3bahZd_Nw/video.html
Hi Vince great video . I tried using this on some Burnt red by AK interactive and instead of getting a nice warm lighter red ... i got a pink colour instead. If i want to just have a lighter red to burnt red .. how would i go about doing that ?
Don't mix it, layer it down, then glaze the red over the top. :)
how do you handle cold highlights? Let's say I used a pale blue to highlight the cloak, should the whole model use this this highlight? Ofcourse it is up to the artist, but is there realism in using both a warm and cold highlight on one model (with disregard of OSL things)
FOr universal cold highlights, I use something like Glacier Blue or Maggot White.
Did you use Sunny skin for all of the examples? Is there a Vallejo equivalent as the light flesh is much lighter? Or does it do the exact same thing?
Yes, sunny skin tone for everything except the yellow, which was light flesh. But you can also use light flesh instead of a white for your highest highlights with all of them.
Excellent video as always, have you tried a Vallejo paint called buff for this?
Yes, it's a little more neutral and strong, but it works, as does Ice Yellow and Glacier blue.
Now, Juan Hidalgo has no reason to hate the color blue!! 😄
Exactly, I await his inevitable turnaround on blue. :)
Was there ever a follow up on this about a cool universal highlight color? I want to paint a cool dark bley (bluish grey) cloak and I have no idea what would be a good color to mix in with the base to create the highlights..
Glacier Blue is basically the same thing here, but I need to do a video for sure.
And now we are waiting for the universal shading color video. :-)
It will be coming. :)
Came here for this
@@VinceVenturella It's so gonna be Payne's Grey and we know it... ;)
Do you think Scale 75 golden skin would work for this? or is scale 75 light skin better? Or Vallejo Flesh - Air? My favorite store to order from sadly doesnt stock the colors you used in the video.
The answer is yes, any of those could work, any in that upper range of skin tones from that set would work, depending on what you wanted.
@@VinceVenturella Thank you so much for your reply! Great channel and videos by the way!
Hi vince what flesh tone from GW range would recommend for this? Would kislev flesh work?
Also curious, mainly for the sunny skin tone. Currently I use Kislev for these sort of highlights, but I imagine that is more towards the light skin tone?
Or would Kislev be sunny and flayed one be light?
the closest color in the GW range to what is in this video is Bestigor Flesh to the best of my knowledge. Kislev flesh can be used as a highlight color mix but you're very limited with it since it's a beige color and GW tends to make very overly complicated pigment mixes when it comes to some of their colors so some colors either don't mix well or don't work like similar colors from other brands.
I don't use GW paints anymore due to their crazy high price when scale 75 is better and technically cheaper but insanely hard to track down for retail pricing, so I can't really say anything about how well either mix. The only one I have anymore is a pot of mordian blue that I've had for 10 years.
I really couldn't tell you unfortuantely, as I don't really use much in the way of GW paints, but I know there are paint compatibility charts out there, so I would go by whatever those paint charts say.