Star Wars Legion: Darth Vader & Emperor Palpatine

Star Wars Legion: Darth Vader & Emperor Palpatine

Somehow, Palpatine returned.

Cringe dialogue from a terrible film aside, I’ve painted my first Star Wars Legion models, starting with the two Biggest Bads. Darth Vader from the original core box, and Emperor Palpatine from, well, the Emperor Palpatine box.

Star Wars Legion: Darth Vader

I watched a couple of YouTube videos to get ideas on how to paint Vader, and used a lot of the ideas from Sonic Sledgehammer’s video in order to get him painted reasonably quickly.

Star Wars Legion: Darth Vader

Attempting to use different textures and very slight variations on blacks and greys to show the different materials on Vader’s armour and clothing.

Star Wars Legion: Darth Vader

As always, the flaws really stand out when the photo is blown up to this size, so the drybrushing looks rough and I can see some mould lines that made it through my extensive cleanup process. These PVC models in the Legion range – particularly the early ones are certainly not my favourites!

Star Wars Legion: Emperor Palpatine

Papa Palpatine was a similar kind of paint process. No video required for inspiration, I just googled some images to re-familiarisie myself with the particular pallor of his skin in RotJ and copied the purple-hued grey.

Star Wars Legion: Emperor Palpatine

Adding red-rimmed, yellowed and red-pulilled eyes that you can’t really see because of his hoodie. Slightly-differently-toned black that you can’t really tell apart, and a coat of gloss on his walking stick completed the model.

Star Wars Legion: Emperor Palpatine

Something that you can see in these photos are the …chunks of paint on the sides of his robe, and a hair in the middle. All of which are basically invisible in hand, but have now been shaved off with a scalpel now that I’ve seen them in these massively blown up photos. As with most of the stuff I’ll be posting for a bit here, these models count towards both Dave Stone’s Paint What You Got Challenge 25-26, and also Anne’s 2026 Miniature Assembly Challenge.

Star Wars Imperial Assault: Nexu + Contrast Paint Experiment #7

Star Wars Imperial Assault Nexu

Back to Star Wars Imperial Assault today, with a pair of Nexu, originally seen in Ep2: Attack of the Clones. They only vaguely fit into the Imperial Assault campaign, as for some reason it appears that both the Imperial Forces as well as “Scum” forces have a whole lot of these things as attack-dog style pets. For those not familiar with them, in the film they’re depicted more akin to Lions or Tigers – and used as wild gladiatorial beasts.

Anywho, they sat around on the desk, entirely unpainted but annoying me for ages before I decided to knuckle down and get them done recently. As with a bunch of things, the most effective motivation was to play with the Contrast Paints.

I followed the “official” scheme for these for the most part, with just the smallest bit of variation between the two so they could be told apart on the tabletop. One is a little darker on top and in its stripes and also has a dark snout.

Star Wars Imperial Assault Nexu

As far as the actual painting went, thinned Snakebite Leather Contrast was used for their fur, over Wraithbone. The stripes were done with only-slightly thinned Snakebite Leather on one, and 50%-thinned Cygor Brown for the other, including the snout. The tails were done with a thinned mixture of Gryph-Hound Orange and Fyreslayer Flesh. The dorsal spines were 50-50 Cygor Brown and Black Templar, highlighted with thinned grey. Mouths with Volupus Pink and tongues touched up with thinned red paint. I still gave the fur a final drybrush to unify it all a little more.

Overall, the stripes using Cygor Brown don’t blend quite as smoothly with the rest of the fur as those with Snakebite Leather, but it was overall easier to do all of this, especially on areas like the overall fur, the tails, the mouths and the spines with the Contrast Paints than it would be with traditional washes, due to their physical properties – less viscosity, and the stuff adheres a little better rather than all pooling via gravity. It did also help with overall speed, and especially, with motivation to paint models I wasn’t all that keen on doing.

I’ve got some upcoming models that I’m actually keen on painting, that I also think will also make good Contrast Guinea Pigs. They’re still a ways off, though – all I’ve done so far is select them from a set, so don’t expect to see them too quickly. 🙂