Heresy & Heroes

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Brief Update – Farseer Featured in ‘From The Flickr Pool’

Posted by johnnya10 on 26/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Eldar, Farseer. Leave a comment

What’s that I spy on the GW blog this morning? Could it be? Yeah, it is. Boom. 🙂

farseer on blog post

smug

My Eldar farseer that recently featured on this blog is being shown on the GW blog, which I’m quite chuffed about. I always submit a picture from each post to my flickr feed, which you can find by clicking right here. And when I add an image, I always then add it to the Games Workshop group too. I actually got some Plague Marines on there a long time ago, but it has been a while. It makes me very happy and I’m really proud and pleased with the reception this miniature is getting. Maybe I really need to get back into my Eldar a bit more!

Anyway, this is post is purely recording this for posterity so here’s another image below. Oh, and if you’d like to see it on the GW site, you can by clicking here (for the next couple of days and then it will all be just a memory). I’m also really happy about Talisman getting a full release on iOS, but that’s for another blog on another day…

farseer on gw blog

still smug

Mortifactors Reshoot

Posted by johnnya10 on 26/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Mortifactors. Leave a comment

This is a bit of an odd post. It’s actually all the Mortifactors stuff that you’ve seen so far, taken with a different camera. Nothing new, just a new way of looking at it old stuff. My last post featuring my Eldar Farseer and the Nurgle Daemon Herald that I won a painting competition with last month were both photographed using my old digital camera. What’s more, they were the two best received sets of images on this blog and I can’t help but think that this isn’t a coincidence.

To that end, I reshot all of my Mortifactors Space Marines with the same camera. I’d love to know what you think of these images compared to the old ones (which you can find easily by clicking on the ‘Mortifactors’ tag above or through a site search, or you may recall them if you’re a regular reader) compared to the new ones. If this is widely regarded as better, I’ll reshoot some more. Anyway, here are the images…

Mortifactors Captain with Axe and Jetpack

Mortifactors Captain with Axe and Jetpack

Mortifactors Scouts with Sniper Rifles

Mortifactors Scouts with Sniper Rifles

Mortifactors Chaplain with Jetpack

Mortifactors Chaplain with Jetpack

Mortifactors Rhino APC

Mortifactors Rhino APC

Mortifactors Veteran Sergeant and Combat Squad

Mortifactors Veteran Sergeant and Combat Squad

Mortifactors Combat Squad with Special and Heavy Weapons

Mortifactors Combat Squad with Special and Heavy Weapons

So, what do you think of the photographs? Are these better images or worse? If the wide consensus is that these images are a lot better then I will use this camera from now on, so let me know by sticking some comments below.

Eldar Farseer

Posted by johnnya10 on 24/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Eldar, Farseer. Leave a comment
eldar farseer

Eldar Farseer

Well that was a lot of fun. I really enjoyed painting this miniature for a number of reasons. For one, the Eldar Farseer is a great model that’s easy to assemble and you can make it as complicated or as simple to paint as you want it to be. For another, it was a break from power armour that I really needed.

As well as being a great miniature, tactically it’s very useful. As well as being a really strong HQ in its own right, the Farseer gives my Eldar force a lot more flexibility. My only other two HQs are Karandras (great for my style of play but too expensive for small games) and a Wraithseer (who can’t be the one mandatory HQ in a force and still requires a minimum unit of Wraith Guard) so this guy gives me a cheaper option with some hefty psychic clout too.

Painting this model started out with my ambition getting the better of me slightly, but I think I recovered quite well. This is what I’m talking about…

eldar farseer cloak

When I started out looking at the blank canvas of the cloak, I had the idea of falling autumn leaves. As well as being a great colour palette to work with, it resonates with the Eldar race being in the fading light of their existence. So I thought of all those falling leaves and that was what I wanted to put over the cloak. While I eventually rescued it at least to a level where I’m ok with it, it looked really ropey at some times. I met the level of my current abilities and this is where I’m really going to have to spend time learning.

As for the rest of the miniature, I do a good spirit stone so I added a few with different colours around this mini. I don’t like overusing them as a rule, but I figured with one of the Eldar’s spiritual elite, I could use a few more than I usually would. I really enjoyed doing the blade on the singing spear – it was a complete rip off of my Grey Knights work, but it’s an effect that plays well and I enjoyed it. Oh, and I like the effect I got on those red robes too.

Below are a couple more shots for you to enjoy. It was undercoated black, I used Citadel Paints throughout and I used a Windsor & Newton Series 7 Finest Sable 000 brush.

eldar farseer with spear

plastic eldar farseer

Any comments or questions? Stick them below, please!

Mortifactors Rhino APC

Posted by johnnya10 on 20/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Mortifactors, Rhino, Space Marines. Leave a comment
Mortifactors Rhino APC

Mortifactors Rhino APC

Last night I added the last bits of edge highlighting to the storm bolter that sits atop the turret of this tank and so I can now say that my Mortifactors Rhino is now finished. And I’m really happy with this one.

I’ve never had that much fun painting Rhinos before. I don’t know if it’s the big areas that are lacking details or the fact that I’ve always tried to paint them quite clean, but they’ve never popped. This one pops (if I do say so myself). Of course, it’s helped greatly by a piece of free hand that I’m really, really proud of. If you couldn’t guess from the image above, it’s this bit:

freehand skull on rhino

 

For the skull, I built up from Rhinox Hyde, through Screaming Skull to White Scar, then blended in a tiny amount of yellow, covered it all Reikland Flesh Shade to give it some warmth, and then built up again with a similar pallet. As it’s one of my personal goals to work on my freehand this year, I’m really pleased with how this came out. Though, as you’ll see below, the numeral on the side door wasn’t quite as successful – it looks a bit too human and I may revisit it later to try and ‘fix’ it.

Other parts of the tank that I’m really happy with include the weathering, which is subtle and perhaps indicative of the vehicle being only recently deployed (which I’m cool with). And painting this made me really enthused for this paint-scheme again. The sombre, even morbid tones of black and bone, accented with the violence of that yellow… Wow. I just reread the last couple of sentences. That sounded really gittish, right? Sorry. I sit very near a design team at work and have to listen to stuff like that all the time! Just count your blessings that I didn’t start going on about ‘stark industrial shapes’ and stuff like that. Anyway, you’ll also note the use of pieces from the Chaos Rhino kit which I used because a) it captures the borderline heretical nature of the Mortifactors chapter and b) more skulls.

Anyway, here are plenty more pictures for you. I hope you enjoy them. The tank was assembled and then undercoated black. It was painted using Citadel Paints using a variety of brushes.

space marine rhino

 

space marine rhino front

 

mortifactors rhino side view

 

rhino apc

 

Comments? Questions? Please add them below!

The Most Dakka For Your Buck – The Price of Entertainment

Posted by johnnya10 on 19/02/2014
Posted in: Thoughts and Comment. Tagged: prices. Leave a comment

gw pricing conspiracy

If you’re anything like me, at some point, you’ll have walked out of your FLGS and had to suppress the voice saying ‘You just spent £25.00 on five toy soldiers’. It happens to all of us, I’m guessing. Every now and again, you try to justify it to yourself, but I’m not sure we need to go through this pain actually. I have done some maths!

Ok, so, to quote Terry Pratchett, I often feel like I ‘couldn’t subtract a fart from a plate of beans’ but I’m selling myself short there (hopefully). Read this, and if you’re anything like me, you’ll hopefully see how economically sound the hobby really is. You’ll probably also think that I’m trying to stick up for GW’s apparently harsh pricing model, and I’m really not. Ok, so here goes…

complicated sums

If, for example, I buy a film on DVD or BluRay, let’s assume that this costs me £15.00. I will watch the film once initially, and potentially an average of 3 more times throughout my life (highly dependent on the film, but some of my DVDs have been watched once, while others have been watched over 20 times – this is just a working average based on my habits). So, presuming that the film lasts for 2 hours, and adding half an hour of good extras, we’ll say that this £15.00 gets me 10 hours of entertainment, meaning that an hour of it is worth £1.50.

Now, we take a miniature. A basic infantry single figure will cost, for me (given the armies I collect and the fact that I shop exclusively with GW/FW) between £3.00 and £5.00. That’s a bit loose, given that there will be a large number of components in the box that I won’t use for the models in hand but will go into the bits box and will be recycled later, but, I think it’s fair to call it £4.00 per model in general.

I’m quite lucky in that I am a painter and, to a lesser extent, a gamer. I paint a lot more than I game, but I do enjoy both aspects of the hobby. Even for a basic model, I expect it to take me 20-24 solid hours of work on average. I get a lot of enjoyment from painting, whether I’m learning new techniques, perfecting older methods or whatever. I find it therapeutic and a pleasant use of my time, and so I am happy to spend this amount of time painting.

Mortifactors Tactical Squad with Veteran Sergeant

Ergo, in painting time alone, I am getting on average 22 hours of enjoyment from £4.00, making it an hour of enjoyment for around £0.20. What’s more the volume is greater (10 hours of DVD vs 22 hours of painting a single mini).

This very basic model of calculating worth is skewed considerably by both vehicles and special characters. A Rhino may be the size of a Tactical Squad (and yes, my Mortifactors tactical squad took a considerable number of weeks to paint), but it will only take me say 30 hours to paint (I can use large brushes, there are less tiny details and no basing) and costs the roughly the same. For a similar price, I get less hours of painting enjoyment, but on the flip side of this are special characters. I may take twice as long painting a similarly sized special character, but it is almost sure to cost twice or three times the amount of a regular model. Swings and roundabouts.

Then, there are the materials to add in of course. Undercoat spray, paints, brushes, modelling supplies. But even with all of that, I think it would still not work out as more than £0.40 per model (or model sized aspect of a larger miniature). And remember that I’m not adding the price of the laptop/tv & disc player to the DVD price per hour of enjoyment model.

And all of that still leaves out gaming time. I don’t play a huge amount, and armies tend to go in and out of favour, but saying that each miniature will get 100 games in its lifespan with me is not unreasonable (in fact, given that I still have many, it could be a lot more). The games I play tend to go around 3 hours in length (very rough guess). That’s 300 hours of game time, added to the 22 hours of painting time and taking materials into account, I reckon that would be a cost of about £0.02 an hour for my entertainment.

bad maths zoidberg

Ok, so the maths there is a little ropey (to say the least) but regardless of exactly how accurate it is, even if it’s as much as £0.20 an hour for this entertainment, it is quite good at highlighting the economic bonuses of the hobby.

Yes, I’m sure if we examined other forms of entertainment, from a season ticket to a premier league football club, to membership dues for a MMO game, I’m sure arguments could be found to support each and unless someone wants to commission a much more scientific survey into this, there will always be contention.

clock

Anyway, the point of all of that was to look beyond the price of the models that you walk out of the store with, and instead, look at their worth in terms of the hours of enjoyment that they can provide you with. It’s very hard to do this hobby casually, so you’ll have a passion for either painting, gaming or both. And when you look at the amount of money you pay for these products, and weigh that up against the amount of time that they will allow you to enjoy your passion, the price is very, very low.

My point is, if you’re a painter and a gamer like what I am, taking part in 40k (or any other similar system for that matter) actually works out as being a great way to entertain oneself economically. In other words…

gladiator gif

Agree? Disagree? Disparing of my mathematics? Comments and more below please!

All Sorts of Epic – What’s Left to Bring to 40k?

Posted by johnnya10 on 18/02/2014
Posted in: Thoughts and Comment. Tagged: epic. Leave a comment
space marine 2nd edition box

An ancient artifact that still inspires today.

With the upcoming release of the Imperial Knights highlighting again Games Workshop’s fondness for reviving old Epic models, I thought I’d take a look at some of the miniatures that I’d like to see make the trip across from 5mm to 28mm scale. Oh, and if you’ve been living under a rock for the last month, here’s a link to one of the many BOLS articles about the Imperial Knights stomping into 40k.

Games Workshop, and in particular Forge World, has in recent years revisited the units found in the old Epic scale games. To be honest, there isn’t much left and out of that, some of it is far-removed from the current aesthetics of the setting. Epic wasn’t particularly Grimdark at all really, and it employed much brighter hues giving the game a richness that reflected the general flavour of the 40k universe when 5mm gaming was still a real option. GW was very different too in those days – when Space Marine 2nd Ed was released, it came with almost 550 miniature miniatures, including a titan!

space marine game contents

Epic, through Space Marine, Titan Legions, Epic Armageddon and other titles was also the place where many units that are now common in 40k made their debut. From both the Forge World and Games Workshop stables we have seen 5mm to 28mm moves for (to name just a few examples) Squiggoths, Reaver Titans, Warhound Titans, Basilisks, Lift Droppas, Manticores, Leman Russ Tanks, Wave Serpents, Warp Hunters, Sentinels, Thunderhawk Gunships, Hierodules, Harpies, Falcons, Fire Prisms, Valkyries, Trygons, Thunderbolts, Marauders, Baneblades and much, much more. Forge World have gone further and revisited the system for styling ideas for many miniatures including the now iconic Contemptor Dreadnought. With all of that already moved over, and now the Imperial Knights also crossing over, what’s left?

Chaos

subjugator and plague tower

 

There are a couple of things that really stand out for me as potentially making the move across but they’d be big kits and might not end up being particularly commercially viable. After the Lord of Skulls release, it would be great for each of the major Chaos Gods to get their own Superheavy, and they did have these in epic. The Lord of Skulls is basically the epic Khorne Deathdealer (there was also the Cauldron of Blood, Cannon of Khorne and Tower of Skulls), but as someone who doesn’t run any of the Blood God’s minions, I’d like to see the Slaanesh Subjugator (above left), Nurgle Plague Tower (above right) and Tzeentch Doomwing appear in 40k too. There have been a number of fan made conversions over the years, but GW would have got me a lot more interested in a Chaos-themed Superheavy if they’d have given us non-Khorne players an option other than converting a Baneblade.

Orks

epic great gargant

 

There are a number of trukks, tanks and speedsters that could make their way across, but the big one that most people will want would be the Gargants. There are a number of different sizes ranging from the relatively modest Slasher Gargant to the enormous Mega Gargant, but I don’t see even the smallest of these making the jump any time soon due to sheer amount of materials needed to create one. Gargants dwarf Stompas and though in height, they’re on a par with Forge World’s existing titans, their girth is far greater. Yes, Forge World do some pretty spectacularly priced and oversized models, but I’d be very sruprised if they went down the route of a Gargant any time soon. You orky types will have to keep dreaming…

Imperial

epic imperial army

 

Space Marines are pretty much covered, but there are a few things outstanding for various other Imperial factions. Now, I’m sure we’ve all heard the rumour that Forge World has, piled high in a warehouse no less, boxes full of ready to ship Warlord Titans. This is probably bovine excrement of the stinkiest order given the fact that this rumour has been going around for a decade but nevertheless, maybe it could happen, though, as with the gargant, I doubt it would happen any time soon. Then there’s the Imperial Guard’s Mole – a large, drill-fronted subterranean transport. This could work in 40k but who knows if it will ever happen. And as for the Leviathan, the Imperium’s mobile, titan-sized fortress, or the Ordinatus engines (pictured below), I really doubt it.

adeptus mechanicus ordinatus

 

Tyranids

imperial vs tyranids epic

 

The one that everyone wants is the Dominatrix (far left in the above image) – the largest synapse creature to ever stalk the battlefields of the 41st Millennium. It’s always been guessed at or wondered about, but it has never appeared. It’s another big one, but Games Workshop and Forge World has taken a lot more license with Tyranid models due to their overall shift in aesthetic feel (the Hierodule being a good example – on the image below, the original epic model is on the left, and Forge World’s 28mm scale one is on the right) changing so much over the years, meaning it could be made smaller. The Dactylis could provide another big bug for a Nidzilla List and certainly isn’t impossible, and Malefactors would be in the same bracket.

epic and 40k hierodules

 

Eldar

epic eldar tempest

 

With the titans already covered, and many of the tanks that existed in epic now looking completely different in 40k (have you seen the difference between the Serpent that is and the one that was!?), it’s hard to pin down what can and can’t be done. I’d love to see them have a go at the Tempest, a Grav-tank that wasn’t too big, but Forge World’s Superheavy Scorpion has already borrowed greatly from this. The Vampires and Nightwings have already moved over so there isn’t much Eldar left to port.

Anything else?

Well, Necrons, Dark Eldar and Tau missed out really, when it comes to Epic. But there is a whole army that actually worked a lot better in 5mm than it did in 28mm scale games. Yes, I’m going to use the ’S’ word. Squats were a lot more interesting when they could utilise things like their giant mortars, land-trains, cyclops engines and iron dirigibles. They were a lot less ‘space dwarf’ because everything was so small anyway, and they had access to more than just bikes and Imperial tanks. I guess it’s just a shame the Tyranids ate them all.

epic squat army

 

What would you like to see come across from Epic? And what do you think is likely? Comments below please!

Mortifactors Scouts

Posted by johnnya10 on 14/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Mortifactors, Scouts, Space Marines. Leave a comment
Mortifactors Scouts in Urban Camo

Mortifactors Scouts in Urban Camo

They’re finally done. All that camo and all those quieter tones – finally I can indulge again in working on a larger project with brash colours! 😉 I’m really, really happy with the way these guys came out. For one thing, I think it’s some of the best basing I’ve done ever with each mini having some sort of unique touch to its base. The camo cloaks will be the thing that people look at the most, I’m sure, and I’m pretty delighted with that work too if I’m being honest, even though it was a long, boring process to get all four cloaks looking good. But there are plenty of little touches from the glowing protruding lenses on the goggles, to the missile launcher, to the dull infrared sights on the sniper rifles… basically, it’s a tour de force by my standards.

Space Marine Scouts remain a viable unit in this game and though in very competitive arenas they’ll be understrength and considered a relatively easy kill, for most games they can cause some real problems, especially when equipped with sniper rifles. The missile launcher provides a nice boost too, and the fact that these guys are buffed by stealth and a scoring unit, all for under 100pts, makes them a great troops choice. My plan is still to hope that people forget that they’re there – their camo actually working on my board which is very much an Urban/ash covered setting. Of course, when they play on traditional grass boards, I doubt I’ll have that luck!

Here are some pictures of the individual scouts. The photos aren’t the best quality, but I fired them off last night as I really wanted to get them up on the blog. Planning on doing a proper photoshoot for all of the models featured so far on this blog in the near future. Anyway, enjoy…

kneeling scout with sniper rifle

 

mortifactors scout with sniper rifle

 

mortifactors scout sergeant

 

scout with missile launcher

 

space marine scout

 

And a reminder of the camo pattern:

space marine scout camo cloak 

All models were undercoated black, painted with Citadel Paints and a Windsor & Newton Series 7 Sable 000 was used throughout. Oh, and as a final treat, here’s all the gang so far. I think I can just about squeeze this into 500 points too, so might be able to get a game out of them!

500 points of mortifactors

I won a painting competition!

Posted by johnnya10 on 11/02/2014
Posted in: My Painting and Modelling. Tagged: Chaos Daemons, painting competiton. Leave a comment
painting competition winner

Very proud. 🙂

A very brief update – I won a painting competition! Ok, so it wasn’t a grand premier event like Crystal Brush or Golden Daemon, but I am very proud nonetheless because this is the first painting competition that I ever won. Well, if you don’t count a time I won one at my FLGS when no-one else actually entered. But this time I had actual competition (some of it very good too) so this means a lot to me. I’d like to thank the academy, my parents, my agent… 😉

If you’d like to see more details of this model, the original post featuring my Daemon Herald of Nurgle can be found right here.

And if you’d like to get involved in next month’s competition, you can do so via Warhammer World’s facebook page. Details of the next competition will be going up shortly! And the more the merrier.

Anyway, onwards!

Forge World and Me – What I Want To Paint This Year.

Posted by johnnya10 on 10/02/2014
Posted in: Thoughts and Comment. Tagged: Forge World. Leave a comment
forgeworld logo

Where the pretty things come from…

Forge World create a lot of my favourite miniatures and I can happily spend an hour at a time just window-shopping and making mental lists of all the things I’d like to paint and use in games. Having done this now a thousand times (possibly an exaggeration but would not be shocked if it is actually around that many times), I think I’ve identified my perennial favourites. Well, I decided to put together a brief list here of what I really want to work with a why. Don’t be surprised if you see these appear on my blog in the future (provided I have the money, talent and dedication required to actually get round to all of these).

1. Mamon, Daemon Prince of Nurgle 

Mamon, Daemon Prince of Nurgle

You know I like my daemons and you know I like my Nurgle. I need another excuse to really get into that pot of Nurgle’s Rot sitting in my paint collection for one thing, but besides anything else, this is a great sculpt. Mamon is manky and gross and gribbly and disgusting and everything you want from one of Grandfather Nurgle’s most favoured scions. What’s more, he comes with one of the best looking Heralds too, and I need more Heralds (I always need more Heralds!). I’m confident enough now in my abilities to do this guy justice, and so that’s why he’s high on the list.

2. Chaos Decimator

chaos decimator

 

For one thing, he’s a beast on the table (though I’ve only ever seen him appear once on a table-top in person). A walking predator with some awesome weapons options and a wonderful daemonic demeanour, the Decimator has been on my list for a while now. And with all those large patches of armour, some great opportunities for me to work on my free-hand which is a personal goal for me this year. I’d actually like to fit it with dual-claws and add it to my Emperor’s Children force which is slowly being resurrected. Also, he makes the Contemptor look puny, and that’s no mean feat.

3. The Contemptor Dreadnought

contemptor dreadnought

 

Ok, so I have built a Contemptor before, but that was the Relic variant and it went to my Grey Knights. This one would be the standard model, and he’d be kitted out as a Mortis Pattern with assault cannons and a cyclone missile launcher. When you look at the rules, this version looks like a lot of fun to use (so many nasty shots!) and although it’d be a proper points-sink, I’d love to add him to my slowly growing Mortifactors Army.

4. The… er… Jabberslythe!?

jabberslythe

 

Now, I know what you’re thinking. The Jabberslythe is a) a  fantasy model, b) produced by Citadel and not Forge World and c) what!? Well, hear me out. I think a Giant Chaos Spawn would be a lot of fun to use (cheap, crazy rules and potentially devastating) but the only model on the entire Forge World site that I really dislike is the Giant Chaos Spawn model. Everything else is a winner, but that thing looks like a late night get-her-done sculpt. As I was in my local GW store last week, I was walking down the WFB range and saw the Jabberslythe. It’s about the right size, and with a couple of modifications and appropriate basing would suit a Nurgle CSM army well. If I ever get around to doing it, you guys’ll be the first to know.

 

So what’s on your FW wishlist? What do you think of the Jabberslythe idea? Comments, questions and ideas below, please!

Hobby Malaise – When painting ain’t fun anymore

Posted by johnnya10 on 07/02/2014
Posted in: Thoughts and Comment. Tagged: hobby malaise. 1 Comment
my painting station

my painting station – where the magic happens, even when it doesn’t feel very magical

Today, I want to talk about hobby malaise. We all get it to a varying degree and I’m going through it right now. It’s not exactly a funk, but it’s when what you do for fun seems to be making demands on you and that don’t seem right somehow. Basically, it’s when painting isn’t enjoyable.

To paraphrase Burns, the best laid plans of mice and men oft end up as a big pile of unpainted plastic that you hide in a draw and try to ignore. It’s not like I don’t have lots to paint. On the contrary. I have most of the Dark Vengeance Box, my old Emperor’s Children Army to resurrect, a Forgefiend, a Rhino, a bunch of scenery… yeah. But over the last week it has felt like a chore rather than a pleasure and that’s not good.

hobby drawer

the drawer is full of things that need painting…

Like everyone, my day-to-day life is full of malarky ranging from the mildly annoying to the down-right depressing. There are plenty of peaks too, but there are as many troughs. There’s the daily commute, the boring lunches, being sat at my desk staring at a screen for eight or more hours a day, five days a week. When I come home (provided I don’t opt for the pub instead) I want to do something that will help me to relax. For so long, painting, playing and discussing 40k has been a great outlet for me. It’s calming, cathartic and, most crucially, it’s enjoyable. Most of the time.

I don’t know why this week. I could try and analyse it and dig to the root of the issue, but I think that’d be pointless. For one thing, there isn’t really an issue. It hits us all from time to time where the sight of our paints and brushes just makes us think ‘meh’. Maybe its my mind’s way of reconnecting with the real world. I’ve done a few things I’ve been meaning to do for ages. Fixed this, called them, watched that… all because I was not hunched over my paints. If there’s a silver lining, it’s that – a bit more productivity in other areas of my life. And that’s a healthy way to look at it, I hope.

Anyway, what I wanted to talk about, was how to get over it. This is not my first rodeo and over the years, I’ve noted a few tips and trends to help get one out of the malaise. Here’s what I hold to be true…

• Don’t force it – Sitting there forcing yourself to paint will not improve your fondness of the hobby and you might just end up doing a poor job because of it. Step back from it and let it happen again when you’re ready.

chiltern hills

there’s a whole world out there that doesn’t involve painting miniatures!

• Go outside – We all do it. This self imposed isolation and stuffy rooms, gorging on junk food and ignoring the world beyond the little circle of light that illuminates our efforts. A bit of exercise and fresh air will do you the world of good.

• Enjoy your other passions – We are all deep, multi-facetted humans capable of enjoying more than just one pastime. With that in mind, go and enjoy something else for a while. Whether it’s going to a museum or art gallery, playing football or writing limericks on the walls of public toilets – go do that fro a while.

• Switch up your projects – Monotony does you no favours. If you’re stuck in the middle of a big project, break off and try painting a mini you’ve always wanted to paint. Working on a huge horde of orks and sick of the sight of green? Why not paint a blood angel for a change?

clock

• Set a schedule – This can be a great trick. Say that you’re going to work on your miniatures for an hour and stick to that. If after an hour you find yourself really keen to do more, then the malaise will have left you.

Anyway, this weekend, I’m going to spend some time with some friends I’ve not hung out with for a while, switch up my routine and try to get some exercise as well. So no hobby from me, but hopefully, when next week rolls around, I’ll be ready to crack on with my paints and have a smile plastered over my face as I do so. Onwards!

What do you do to deal with the hobby malaise? Any tips or tricks to avoid the lethargy? We’d all love to hear them so stick them in a comment below!

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