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So here's a figure I began working on in 2010. That is three years ago! Since then I had so many crazy things happen in life and it feels funny finally getting around and finishing the Prince and the female Sand Demon. The Prince was fully made from a Sota Fei Long with custom swords and painted with a mix of acrylic and pastel chalk. You should all really look up some YT videos and spend those 10 bucks on a set of brown and skin tone pastels. The shading you can do with simple techniques is just worth the effort. Oh and Ubisoft, 20 million sales! Make a new POP game! Or at least put the next Assassins Creed game in Persia to add insult to injury. ![]() |
Prince of Persia Sand Demon | ![]() | Submission Order | ![]() | Tom Strong |
Prince of Persia Sand Demon | ![]() | Prince of Persia Series | ![]() | The Prince |
Prince of Persia Sand Demon | ![]() | Created by VincentShaw | ![]() | Zombie Merle Dixon Walking Dead |
I was wondering if you please tell me what colors you mixed for that skin tone
/watch?v=9zvXud_AuMw
watch?v=MhCjMoBc0Us
Search for face-up and ball jointed dolls BJD. You can see that the heads are way bigger than even 1/6 scale figures, which makes things a lot easier for them, but the basic techniques can still be adopted with a lot of practice.
Generally, what you do is first wipe that head clean from any paint (I use aceton free nail cleanser) and apply a white base coat. On that you pretty much just do what they show you in those videos. Red for lips, brown for shading and so on. After some experimenting and several botched heads you should get the hang of it
Oh and yes....don't touch the head when you still haven't sealed it, the oils from your fingers will butcher the paint like Jason.
Oh and double yes, after each coat of paint, spray some matt varnish on your head and then apply the next coat of paint, otherwise it won't stick to the surface.