Flexible Triad: Warm Skin Tones

SKU: BNDL26
  • 6 x 18ml Warpaints Fanatic acrylic paint
  • Warm skin tones for any historical miniature, fantasy figure, and wargaming system
  • Makes colour choice easy
  • Flexible Colour Triad with six colours ranging from deep and dark, to bright and light
Sale price$25.50
PRODUCT INFO

Bring your miniatures to life with the Flexible Triad: Warm Skin Tones. This range of colours reflects the natural variations in skin, providing you with a range of hues perfect for creating realistic and diverse skin tones. Add details and delicate finishing touches such as cheeks, lips, and the tips of ears to accentuate each character’s unique expression. Whether you’re painting heroic figures, everyday townspeople, or fantastical beings, this triad is an essential tool for adding those critical finishing touches that make your miniatures truly stand out.

The Warm Skin Tones Triad is suitable for projects across all genres of miniature painting, from historical and military figures to fantasy creatures and sci-fi models.

The Flexible Triad: Warm Skin Tones consists of:

  • Warpaints Fanatic: Carnelian Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Tiger's Eye Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Topaz Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Jasper Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Tourmaline Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Leopard Stone Skin

The Flexible Colour Triad System is a segment, or family, of six colours that range from dark to light with a consistent hue. This system allows you to easily select paints that create a natural colour progression on your miniatures. This is an easy way to create a colour scheme for your miniature when army painting because you always have 27 Flexible Triads to choose from instead of mixing colours.

The system builds upon the traditional triad system by introducing more versatility and adaptability in colour selection, expanding the conventional three colours to six. This gives you almost endless possibilities for putting colours together within the triad.

When using a triad system, you usually select 3 colours (a base, a shade, and a highlight), depending on the level of contrast you want on your miniature. For instance, for minimal contrast, opt for 3 adjacent colours to achieve a smooth colour transition. For maximum contrast, use the lightest, middle, and darkest colour available in the flexible triad.

Bring your miniatures to life with the Flexible Triad: Warm Skin Tones. This range of colours reflects the natural variations in skin, providing you with a range of hues perfect for creating realistic and diverse skin tones. Add details and delicate finishing touches such as cheeks, lips, and the tips of ears to accentuate each character’s unique expression. Whether you’re painting heroic figures, everyday townspeople, or fantastical beings, this triad is an essential tool for adding those critical finishing touches that make your miniatures truly stand out.

The Warm Skin Tones Triad is suitable for projects across all genres of miniature painting, from historical and military figures to fantasy creatures and sci-fi models.

The Flexible Triad: Warm Skin Tones consists of:

  • Warpaints Fanatic: Carnelian Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Tiger's Eye Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Topaz Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Jasper Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Tourmaline Skin
  • Warpaints Fanatic: Leopard Stone Skin

The Flexible Colour Triad System is a segment, or family, of six colours that range from dark to light with a consistent hue. This system allows you to easily select paints that create a natural colour progression on your miniatures. This is an easy way to create a colour scheme for your miniature when army painting because you always have 27 Flexible Triads to choose from instead of mixing colours.

The system builds upon the traditional triad system by introducing more versatility and adaptability in colour selection, expanding the conventional three colours to six. This gives you almost endless possibilities for putting colours together within the triad.

When using a triad system, you usually select 3 colours (a base, a shade, and a highlight), depending on the level of contrast you want on your miniature. For instance, for minimal contrast, opt for 3 adjacent colours to achieve a smooth colour transition. For maximum contrast, use the lightest, middle, and darkest colour available in the flexible triad.