
My middle son had fun with these paints, and we discovered that the black, in particular, is very good, even over large flat areas. These Weren’t the Paints my Children Were Looking For Painted in record time with contrast paints. My son was particularly uninspired with his results. We’ve slapped paint thickly on a few Space Marines models, and frankly, the results haven’t been all that good. One thick coat works OK, but little more than that. “One thick coat” was the Contrast paints marketing slogan, a riff on Duncan’s “two thin coats” catchphrase from the Warhammer TV painting videos. You’re Not Going to Want to Use One Thick Coat There are, however, some painting jobs at which they excel, and after some initial skepticism, I wouldn’t be without them. They most definitely have their uses, but much as you wouldn’t (shouldn’t) use your hammer to pound screws into the wall, they can’t do everything. Lots of painters greater than I have already mentioned this, but Contrast paints are just another tool in your painter’s box. For a start, you’re probably going to want some metallics. Whilst you could get away with only using Contrast paints, you’re not going to want to. Here then are 13 things I’ve learned about Contrast paints.

In that respect, the arrival of Contrast paints has been extremely fortuitous.

I laid out a 4-step program as to how I was going to investigate the properties of the paint and help determine whether they were something you might want to add to your paint repertoire.Īs ever, my painting plans have been knocked about a bit, not least because of the arrival of Warhammer AoS: Warcry. Reviewing this set has taken up a fair amount of my hobby time, but it has also meant I’ve needed to crack on with some painting.

In July, I wrote about the arrival of Games Workshop’s Contrast paints, a new range it claimed they would revolutionize the way we paint our figures. Ylthari’s Guardians from ‘Warhammer Underworlds’ painted entirely with Contrast paint to a “Four Seasons” style.
