Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Lady Gibbons

Warhammer Witch Elf by Mark Gibbons

I will never forget the first time I opened the 4th Edition Dark Elves Armybook and was blown away from the fantastic art made by brilliant artists like Mark Gibbons, Des Hanley, Dave Gallagher and others. These artworks never bored me staring at them and I studied them for hours. With time moving on they served multiple times as inspiration for my miniature art. First I used them as reference for conversions and later as basis for designing whole miniatures. Still today I often use parts of them as reference for painting freehands. 

If there is one artwork which never let me go and which served as basis for multiple versions of its character it is the Witch Elf by Mark Gibbons. That angry lady has a surreal beauty which captivates you and let you be afraid the same time. Mark once wrote me that he is a magnet for dangerous women. I think we can be happy, that he shared his experiences in his art and that we can inspect that from a safe distance. This way his Ladies did not appear less intriguing to us. Once in my head Marks Witch Elf became my archtype for a Daughter of Khaine. Fascinated by this character, Lady Gibbons served as a reference for multiple projects through the ages. Today I want to share with you these sinister Ladies together with their story.

 

Three different versions of Marks iconic Witch Elf can be found in my cabinets

 

My first conversion

I started Warhammer Fantasy in January 1998 with my first Dark Elves army which I got as a birthday gift for my 19th birthday. It was an army from a poster deal which also contained three blisters of Witch Elves. I remember that these Wicht Elves were some of the first miniatures I painted. I used thick paint and painted all in different colours. Because a Champion for the regiment was missing I decieded to do my first conversion. Fascinated by Marks Witch Elf artwork I used thisone as reference and chose a miniature which was as close as possible to her character. I bended the miniature to capture the reference pose better. There was need to cut of her left arm and rearrange it completly new to get the pose right. The gap I filled with an air drying crafting clay. This was the first time using something like a putty. Because I had no tools I used a toothpick for sculpting. Her rigth arm had needed also a rearrangment but I feard this was to far from my skills. Therefore I kept it that way. The lower leg armour I created with thin cardboard I cut in shape and added tops of toothpicks as spikes. These were glued simply on the legs. Finally, there was need to create some weapons. I used needles for creating the parry blade which she raises high in her right hand. The shape of her sword was cut from her original blade. The basing was simple due to a lack of experience. Because of her pose there was need to position her rear leg on a stone

Witch Elf conversion created in 1999 in reference to Marks iconic Witch Elf artwork 
 
The conversion was finally painted to fit the rest of the unit. I used red tones as I liked these the most from all the colours I had tested. Additionally I added some freehands to get closer to the reference art. In this regard I tried to paint skulls on the lower leg armour and some line work on the upper top of her boots. A rune on her crest and some evil eye make up should underline her champion character. Even if the painting miss technical perfection, contrast and depth, the amount of details was very ambitious in these early hobby days. I still remember how proud I was of her. 
 
However, these early Witch Elves unit was hard to look at as time and my skills moved on. When I started to redo my 4th Edition army 20 years later the Witch Elves were one of the first units I sacrificed in a cauldron of aceton. All except of one. I spared Lady Gibbons. I shortly though if a complete revision of the conversion and a new painting would suit her. But I decieded against, because it would have destroyed the soul of the miniature and I am better doing one from scratch. Finally, she gets a lovely place in my cabinet and reminds me always where I came from and my first days in the hobby when everything was still new.

 

My first Green

As you have read above I started converting my miniatures very early in my hobby carrer. First using only simple techniques like changing parts, but I started quickly to do experiments with clay to perform some more complicated weapon and head swaps. The quality dramatically changed when I learned about Greenstuff. I can´t remember where I get my first stripes from but I remember well that I felt this will change everything. I started using it for simple conversions and ended more and more sculpting single parts of figures. First it was more some kind of resculpting what I had damaged during the conversion process. Then it became more and more sculpting my own details. Becoming better and with more experience I decieded to do some first experiments in the direction of sculpting my own figure. My first test in this direction was sculpting Tullaris from Har Ganeth by the fantastic art of Des Hanley. While I sculpted nearly the whole miniature I used a head and the weapon from existing Dark Elves miniatures because I feared my skills would not be sufficient for doing that by my own. Consequently, it wasn´t my first complete green, but it motivated me to do my first try in November 2001. I chose a further Artwork from the 4th Edition armybook and I took the one which impressed me most, Mark Gibbons Witch Elf!
 
Witch Elf Green from 2001
I started this ambitious project with creating an armature from with simple wire and put it on a cork as I have seen it from other sculptors. Then I started the sculpting process. My only tool was a toothpick and I used WD40 oil as a separating agent. The latter was a mess and the whole sculpt was always oily and looked like a fried chicken. I started at the bottom and sculpted a rough body shape and legs. Then I sculpted me slowely upwards in different sessions to geht the basic figure before adding tons of details. Luckily, I did a lot of pictures for documenting my project in my ancient forums and on my website. Therefore, I will provide a future article about the single steps of creating this green with all its oily details. Until then, you can see here my final result.
 
Final pictures of my Witch elf Green which I started sculpting in November/December 2001 
 
Retrospectively, I still think it was a respectable result for a first green. I am still happy with a lot of details, e.g. the leg armour and the sword. However, the whole figure miss some depth and is a bit to flat. The body anatomy isn´t that good as can be seen at the butt-leg transition, arms to thin and missing elbows. Finally and most important, her face isn´t that evil and pretty as I wished for her... it looks more like a plastic surgery fail of the mid 90s rewarded with nice pair of dinghy lips. Maybe I am a bit harsh with my self critic and I should keep in mind that it was my first try doing something like this. Additionally, I remember that the community liked it very very much. For most people in the hobby sculpting your own miniature was so far away that they totally go insane with compliments and feedback. That not enough I got a very nice feedback from a former friend and collector. His name was James Humphries from the US, owner of the website virtual alchemist and from whom I got my first rareties from. In the early 2000s he produced a series of limited edition miniatures for collectors. He wanted my Witch Elf for this series and so I sent it to the US where she got casted. 
 
Casting of the Witch Elves Green
Unfortunately, the project was canceled by the GW legal department after the first advertising. James sent me back the produced castings and the remainings of the green which was completly destroyed by the casting process. From these castings I built my version which I painted. The painting wasn´t very special and was in accordance with my late 5th Edition Dark Elves colour scheme. That means a lot of metals and beside some small spots of Hawk Turqoise and Liche Purple shaded with Nauseating Blue there was not much colour. I tried to cover the sculpting weekness especially in the face. Some aggressive eye make up helped to correct the eyes. I also added freehand details on the crest and on the boots. For the letter I am still very proud because these small skulls look very similiar to Marks brilliant reference. I think a modern painting could get out much more of the miniature. Especially using NMM could highlight all the beautiful details of the leg armour. Maybe one day I will give this girl a second try.    
 




Painted casting of my Witch Elf miniature. Painted in October 2002

Through the years I shared some castings with some friends and followers. I do not know where they all end, but it looks like some of these copies get some doubtful fame and had crazy stories. I know one ended on the Collecting Citadel Miniatures WIKI in the unreleased Dark Elves section where she is still listed as an unreleased trial sculpt?! I also heard one who was sold through the Yahoo Collecting Citadel Miniatures group for around $ 110?! It looks like time tends to produce some legends and I am happy that this lady at least get some attention. 

 

Lady Gibbons in the Age of Sigmar

Sometimes all you need for inspiration is a plastic bit. That is how this latest version of Lady Gibbons started to return again on my workbench. I was already warmed up as I had started a small Daughters of Khaine army a couple of months before. When thinking about a hero miniature and looking through the miniature range I noticed the big hair frome the Cauldron Slaugther Queen. The latter is nice remake of Aly Morrisons brilliant Cauldron Hag designed in the mid 90s. However, it was the first time I got the idea combining this bit with a regular Witch Elf and at once I had my favorite artwork from Mark in mind. Unfortunately, I had already built my Cauldron Slaughter Queen, which made it neccessary to buy a second kit. I experimented with a couple of bits and quickly had everything together to build a perfect interpretation of Marks beautiful artwork.   

For the body I used one of the cauldron guardians which had the perfect pose. The pose required some stairs and Morthis base was perfect. It only had to be optimised for the larger step length. A big sword I found in the sprue from the Dark Eldar Wyches. The most difficult part was to find the perfect face. Marks dark magic created an artwork in which the character of the Witch Elves is expressed only by this angry and insane looking face. I think all husbands know a milder version of this look when you had again forgot to take out the garbage. Can you feel the shiver? It was elemental to find an Elven face which enables making you feel this way. Consequently, I looked through all available ones and tested a dozen with potential. None was perfect but the best I could find and which made me shiver was one from the new Khinerai sprue.

Witch Elf conversion work in progress
It is important to note that my goal was not to rebuild exactly Marks artwork. Instead I wanted to create an interpretation which fits into the current Daughters of Khaine miniature range but would be as close to Marks artwork as possible. In this regard I used the common form language of the Daughters miniature range. For the leg armour I used designs from the Khinerai miniatures and the shoulder armours were designs from the Melusai. I also added the Parry Blade from the Cauldron Queen. Beside a slight difference in the leg pose I also decieded for a change in the arm pose as the original sword arm drawn by Mark looked very unnatural when recreated on a miniature. Consequently, I chose an arm position which was close to the original and fit to the pose of the conversion. 

While I had fantastic bits which covered most of Marks iconic Witch Elf there was still need for some sculpting work to link everything smoothly. The best way to get the Khinerai leg armour onto the boots of the Witch Elf was making small molds of the bits and to use it for stamping the armour parts with brownstuff on them. The hair I repaired with greenstuff just by following the preexisting lines of the original bit. There was also some work needed to repair the sword and dagger and to link both to the miniature. I added a small skull to the swordhandle but can´t remember I got that bit from.

The Witch Elf conversion taking shape and dominated my workbench in September 2018
 
Finally, there was need to fit the shoulder armour to the miniature. The original ones were all left sided, so I cut and resculpted one to fit for her right side. There was also need to adjust the arm position and to repair their connection to the body. Then I added some belts to connect the armour to the miniature. Because the original Cauldron Guardian is a bit flat-butted I added some greenstuff to get it in shape. Not that it was really necessary... but the artwork looked like Mark liked some curves. Unfortunately, I have no picture from the backside. But you will see it later painted and I think you will like it too.   
 
Working on the pauldrons and repairing the arm-body connections
 
I decieded to keep head and body seperated which would make it easier to paint that complex miniature. A quick comparison with the original drawing from Mark showed that my conversion catch right nicely the main features of the figure. I posted it on social media and the following feedback quickly confirmed that this project goes in the right direction. Mark also approved it and with his blessing it was time to paint her.

Comparison of the Witch Elf conversion with its reference
 
 
The conversion was primed and I started as usual with the skin colour. I quickly focused on the head, because I was very curious if I was able to catch Marks fantastic Witch Elf look. I stayed very close to my colour schemes which I had already establieshed with my Witch Aelves. I painted the hair by a mix of black and with strands which I highlighted or shaded with purple, respectively. The crown was painted in NMM gold with a red gem. Then it was time to start the details on the face. I added a dark smokey eye make up with some pink eyeshadow. The eyes itself were painted light brown and the lips get some natural redish lip tone. Overall I was very very happy with her face. She remembered me a bit on Charlize Theron and I liked that thought. The face was a bit different to Marks work but I think it sends her message very clear. 
 


I continued working on the body with smoothing the skin and adding shades to highlight her beautiful anatomy. For seperating the areas I added the basic colours for the gold areas and the red loincloth.
 
 
 
 
After I was happy with the skin I concentrated on the metals. I very much enjoyed painting the golden bra and the pauldrons. The latter get some nice reflections on their scaled centers. I also painted the arm armour. The challenge here was to create the cylindrical reflections on their small areas and to seperate the cold and silver areas properly. 
 
 
 
 
The next step included some first blendings on sword and parry blade as well as some detail work on the lower leg armour. The letter included some freehand gold edges on the knee armour. That was how I left here the day before me and my wife started our Honeymoon. When I came back I was infected with the idea to repaint my 4th Edition Dark Elves army. I painting an old Dark Elves Champion and started a project which would dominate my next years in the Hobby. After some lonely months without love on my workbench Lady Gibbons went in the cabinet on the shelve of shame.  
 
My painted Witch Elf conversin how I left her in the end of September 2018
 
From time to time I though about finishing her. But, there was still the big hurdle to finish the conversion of her base. My plan was to base her on Morthis base but her step lenght is larger than the step. It was necessary to convert the whole plastic bit of the base and I never got the motivation to do this. 
 
Witch Elf conversion in February 2021
However, I felt Lady Gibbons angry glance from my shelve of shame. Her evil stare became more and more threatening the more time has gone by. Therefore, she was my first choice to finish anything as an entry for The Miniatures Open Painting Competition. One day in February 2021 I grabed her base and get the job done. I painted the base in only one session and glued the body of the miniature on it. Then I finished the whole work on the body. I started finishing the leg armour and worked from bottom to top finishing one area after another. After the body was finished I glued the head on the body and filled the gap between both parts. There was only a bit of revision on the head and overall look necessary. Everything went so fast that I have no single picture of that phase. It ended all taking pictures of the finished miniature on February 21st. Here you can see this angry lady in all her weird glory. Isn´t she a lovely fury?
 
 


 

 
 
Additionally, here some different angles and a better view on the base which made me so much headache.
 
View on the base I used to step her downwards

I was very happy finishing her and to unleash her beauty in this Online Painting competition. The competition was a very very tough one and unfortunately she was not able to win a trophy. However, I am more than happy having her finished after all those years waiting on my shelve of shame. Maybe one day she will get a further chance in a competition, either alone or accompanied by her bloody Sisters.

I hope you enjoyed my journey through my collection of interpretations of Marks Masterpiece of a Witch Elf. I am sure now you believe me that this artwork is my most favorite one. I would love to see her starring from my walls. 
 
Therefore, Mark if you read this, if you ever think about to part with this angry lady, please keep me in mind!
 
Now I am at the end of this article. As always, please let me know what you think and write me in the comments.
 
Kind Regards,
GeOrc

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

2021 Review and 2022 Preview

"When writing these lines a strange and crazy year lies behind us and it looks like this will accompany us far into the new year." These were my first lines of my Review/Preview one year ago. It looks like these were still valid and a good opener for my first posting in 2022. My first posting in 2022 and it is mid of April 2022. The reasons are simple and the same as for sparse blog activity in 2021... a lot of diseases. While our kid enjoyed his day care location and his new infection community he spread nurgles blessing every two to three weeks at home. I can´t remember a phase in my life I was so often ill. Consequently, my job had became very very busy. Spare time was rare and my energy and motivation often low. All this while fighting through the second year of the Corona-pandemic. It wasn´t easy to get some hobby progress but from time to time I enjoyed some time at my workbench. Let´s take a look on the results of the old year and see how my plans look for 2022.

Painting my Dark Elves 

The first miniatures I painted and finished in 2021 were some Cold One Knights, which waited abandoned since a very long time on my workbench. They were part of my armyshot I presented in my last Review/Preview. I decided that I would finish the whole unit of Cold One Knights which were no less than 10 miniatures. At this time point I did not know that this will became an odyssey accompanying me for the whole of the year. Yes, I painted no more no less on my Dark Elves army than this only unit... and the last Knight is still missing. However, the result became a stunning sight. I published a preliminary result in mid of october.

My Cold One Knights regiment with command and general in my october 2021

After that three miniatures were still missing inclusing the Battle Standard Bearer. The latter took me was my biggest project in 2021. He was converted as close as possible to the original studio conversion. The painting of the whole miniature took all my spare time during two and a half months. An article with this story will follow. Until then enjoy some first teaser picture.


4th/5th Edition Dark Elves Battle Standard Bearer conversion

The result was an awesome sight and I was very proud, when I had this miniature finished on my workbench. Half a year later I still enjoy looking at him in my cabinet leading my Dark Elves Army. He motivated me to finish a further Dark Elves Cold One Knight and a further Cold One in December 2021. However, the motivation faded afterwards and the last knight is still work in progress on my workbench. That is how the year ended for my Dark Elves Army. But that was not all I had painted in 20021. I had some other small projects.... 


From my shelve of shame

One day in February I decided to finish one piece from my shelve of shame. It was a Daughters of Khaine Death Hag I sarted and abandoned some years ago. She was a reinterpretation of the famous Mark Gibbons Witch Elves Artwork from 1994. I had plans to base her on Morthis base but her step lenght was larger than the step. It was necessary to convert the whole plastic bit of the base and with that and starting my 4th Edition Dark Elves Army I lost my motivation. However, I felt Lady Gibbons angry glance and her evil stare bacame more and more threatening the more time has gone by. Therefore, she was my first choice to finish as an entry for The Miniatures Open Painting Competition. I was very happy finishing her and to unleash her beauty in this Online Painting competition. Isn´t she a lovely fury?

Daughters of Khaine Death Hag in referece to the famous Mark Gibbons Witch Elves Artwork

The competition was a very very tough one and unfortunately she was not able to win a trophy. However, I am more than happy having her finished after all those years waiting on my shelve of shame.

 

The call of Slaanesh

Beside Dark Elves I love Games Workshops Chaos armies. Through the ages I have collected large armies and started different projects for the different Chaos fractions. Beside wonderful army projects, dozens of unfinished miniatures fill my shelve of shame. After a loss of motivation painting Cold One Knights in March/April I decided to paint a further miniature from my Shelve of Shame. already on the path of Slaanesh through some collecting activities, I took a Champion of Slaanesh I started painting in 2009 and never finished. It was a project I enjoyed a lot and so I painted a couple of deamonettes to join their Champion.

Small Slaanesh Warband I painted in preparation for an upcoming army project

It was a lot of fun to paint this small Warband and test some colour shemes. I love these old Citadle Realm of Chaos miniatures and they are a pleasure to paint. Luckily, I have collected a respectable collection of these and I am looking forward to paint them in a future project.

 

Cleaning up my workbench and years end

It may sound surprising, but my biggest problem in miniature painting is the basing process. While I can transfer nearly every color scheme or idea on a miniature, it is hard for me to transfer my environment ideas on a base. Mostly it is a technical problem in combination with ambitious ideas. This results in a lot of unbased miniatures or on hold projects because I have problems to realize a basing idea. Therefore, when it comes to clean my workbench at years end I decided to solve some of these basing problems.... solve some of the bigger basing problems! I decided to base my two unreleased Chimeras. My initial idea was to place them on higher ground using parts of a collapsed High Elves column. I thought a long time how to realize that. Finally, I did some sketches, design the column, made a mold cast it in gypsum in broke it in pieces. That´s the short story. Here some teasers of the Chimera project I am actually workin on

Both 4th Edition unreleased Chimeras based on my workbench

 Meanwhile, the first chimera is already painted and I do not want to keep back a first view on the result.


I am more than happy how she turned out. It was a great pleasure to paint this beautiful monster and to highlight this rare miniature. The second one is already work in progress an I hope to show the results and an article in the futre on this page. Stay tuned!

 

Outlook 2022

I don't want promise to much as I have learned that real life is hardly predictable at the moment and to often it makes it necesarry to reduce my activities. As you have seen above, I had some good progress through the last year but I hardly get the time and muse to write about it. I hope to be able to write some more in the upcoming months to show all the finished stuff and finish all my started articles. But be patient with me. If the real life gets hard my focus is always on the painting side to escape these troubled times.

Painting in 2022

In the moment I am looking forward to finish the chimeras. I would also love to finish my last Cold One Knight as well as standard troopers and finish some regiments for my Dark Elves to make the army  ready for a new army shot. Beside working on my Dark Elves army I will try to paint a couple of different things this year. I would also love to add a couple of further Slaanesh miniatures to my growing Realm of Chaos Warband. Additionally, I also want to paint more of my rare and unreleased stuff. Through my collecting activities I was able to get my hands on some very precious miniatures. I would love to paint some of these figures to pay respect to the honorable collectors who sold these rareties for my collection. 

My workbench in mid of April 2022 wit a Teaser of the second chimera.

Now it´s time to return to my workbench. I hope you enjoyed my little review and my further plans for the new year. Let me know what you think and what you are working on in 2022.

Kind Regards,

GeOrc

Friday, November 12, 2021

Dark Elves Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus - Part 2

Darl Elves sorceress riding Dark Pegasus
A further victim of a busy year. I had hoped to finish the final article about painting my Dark Elves Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus earlier. But as mentioned before, my real life required to reduce my spare time in 2021 and my hobby activities and this blog was the first thing I had to silence down. Consequently, I was not able to finish many articles in the last six months. However, things have become better and since a couple of weeks I am back. Time to finish some negelted articles and update some series. The first will be creating my banner for my Dark Elves Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus which I did around one year ago. If you missed the first part of this article, please check this Link here.

The Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus was already painted in January/February 2020. The only parts missing were her banner pole and the banner itself. I took a smal break from the miniature and finished my Dark Elves Warrior Command Crew. With its Standard Bearer I get some additional experience creating the paper banner and thought I was ready for the one of the sorceress. I started designing and painting her banner in the end of March 2020. But my firsdt approach failed and lost the motivation. I concentrated on my unreleased Dar Elves sorceress and Dark Elves Dark Riders instead. With finishing the Dark riders banner I got new motivation and returned to the Sorceress banner end of October 2020. After revision and optimaization of the sketch I painted and finished the Banner. The result was already visible in the picture of my Army Shot in the beginning of 2021. Read here now the detailed story of designing and creating the Banner and see the final pictures of the Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus.


Preliminary Considerations  

From White Dwarf #190

The original Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus came in a box released in White Dwarf #190 in September 1995. Beside the miniature the box also contained a self-adhesive banner which was probably designed by Alan Merrett and painted by Neil Hodgson as most of the Dark Elves shield and banner icons. While I like the majority of these banners a lot, the one from this Sorceress is the weakest in my opinion. I assume the old looking hairy skull should show a stylised hag before blood night. However, I think the icon did not fit for a sorceress and hair and stylised snake ending horns somehow look weird. On the other side the general idea of the skull looking at the brogen heart is nice. But, the banner miss the clarity of the rest of the banner range. Having in mind the parts I like on them I decided to adapt the parts I disliked and design a new version of it, fitting to the banner range. 

Dark Elves Battle Standard
For that I used the Medusa showing Battle Standard. This design became the banner of Ghrond and therefore the banner of the home of the Dark Elves Sorceresses later in Games Workshops Dark Elves history. This made it the perfect icon for a Sorceress. I took the idea of the skulled Medusa head and the original banner design from the Sorceress riding Dark Pegasus and sketched a new banner icon containing the ideas and designs I liked. I started with some simple pen sketches I did during my lunch breaks. After I got a feeling for the otiginal skull design from the Sorceress banner I added the snake hair and the horns from the medusa design. After I had a rough idea of the arrangement I painted one version into the original banner frame.

       


First sketches of the banner design ideas
 

I scanned that version and used photoshop to mirror the icon into the other side of the banner frame.

 

Using of Photoshop to mirror the design
 

This version was printed in a very light grey tones.

Very light print of the banner and its design used for painting

I cut out the banner design carefully and used it for a first try to paint it.

Banner ready for painting
 

First Approach

For the painting I cut out the banner as I did with my latest one for the Dark Elves Warriors and started adding colour. Unfortunately, I quickly ran into problems. The paper starts twisting and the colour application became very speckled. What was wrong? It was a different kind of paper I used here. In my previous version I used thicker very qualitative paper with a weight of 100 g because the banner was a one sided hanging banner with straps. The banner here was a double sided one. For that I used thinner standard paper as the banner will get thicker when glueing both sides together. That was the reason it was less stable against twisting. In addition the surface quickly absorbed the water from the colour leading to speckles.

First try and first fail to paint this version of the banner


Probably, with some patience I would be able to save the banner as adding more an more colour would seal the surface and stop further twisting. Moistering the backside and puting it between a thick book for a couple of days would bend it even. But when posting the work in progress banner into my painting group I got some serious critic for the design itself which makes me start thinking to start from scratch. This critic said the snakes of the Medusa head should look into the direction of the heart. It was quickly clear that this would change the whole quality of the banner, as this would increase the interaction between the elements and tell a more comprehensive story.
 

Revision of the Sketch and Final Version

After a couple of days thinking about the needed modifications I gave them a try and used photoshop to rearrange the head position. The new view direction worked fine but the empty space between head and fram further increased. Further modifications were necesarry to make this look good. Therefore, I filled the space with more snake hair and covered that neck part.  

Revised banner design with rearranged head and additional snake hair

 The final design worked well. However, the latest bad experience in banner painting were still in my head. Therefore, I lost my motivation to continue working on this version and put it asaide. It needed a couple of months and some more experience on creating and painting banners to start from scratch. That point was reached after I sucessfully painted my Dark Elves Black Riders Banner. Highly motivated and armed with some new techniques I started that banner anew. 

The Banner was a joy to paint and I had a very fast progress on it. In just one Session I painted a first rough version of the right side. The result looked good but it became clear that the empty space where the shoulder and neck would be situated still looked confusing. Again I used the Battle Standard as reference an added the red shoulder armour from the original design.

The additional element worked fine and served its purpose. However, because the black backgound was already painted on the right side, it became slightly darker on this side of the banner. Having everything together and working now I finsihed the whole banner by doing a lot of detail work in the final steps.

Finally, I compared my final version with my first try and was very happy how my skills developed during that year. That Banner was really a great design and I can´t wait to add it to the Sorceress banner pole.


Comparison of my final banner with the first approach

Final Pictures

As always I cut ou the banner and used PVA glue to add it to the banner pole. Still wet from the glue I bent it in waves to add some dynamic. After the banner had dryed for a day I added the golden edge and some additonal shading to the banner to adapt it to the light situation. Finally, I added some damage in the rear lower corner to give it a bit used look.

Then it was time to add the banner pole to the Sorceress. Carefully, I glued the pole to the backrest. For that I did not used the original knob because this does not fit without bending the banner pole. Instead I glued it on top allowing me to put the banner straight on the backrest without damaging the pole. After everything was done I sat a long time in front of this iconic miniature and starred at what I had created. The result impressed me very much and the miniature was the centerpoint of my Dark Elves Army. She look like a true Herohammer representative of her age, but judge yourself.  


 


This miniature really had a long journey. I still remember that the first one I painted back in 1998 became a victim of black undercoat instead of vanish. A fatal failure and thorn in my side leading to a bath of aceton a couple of years later. But instead of a new painting she was abandoned in a black box of 5th Edition miniatures. The try to make her a center piece of my 6th Edition army failed and she never was finished. I am more than happy that this shame is deleted in my long list of fails. Now she is having her deserved place in my cabinet leading an army of respectable Dark Elves.

I hope you like the final result as well. As always let me know what you think in the comments.

All the Best,
GeOrc