Truthfully, it’s the Primaris that sold me. I think they’re just spectacular, for the most part. Almost every kit to me is what Astartes should be, visually. Then Iron Father Feirros came out and I knew which chapter I was gonna play. He is by far the coolest model in the Primaris range, IMO.
I am tremendously limited in terms of time, having a baby girl and just the wife and I with no other assistance to take care of her. However, things are normalizing enough to the point I can spend the late and early hours hobbying. Bit by bit, I’ll get there. I’m focusing on my Astartes army first because I want to start with the army that will get an edition -relevant codex ASAP.
Getting it done means accepting a tabletop standard for the army. Not that I’m a great or meticulous painter, but perfectionism has long kept me from getting anything done. Constant struggle.
The idea is a contingent of the 3rd company that has literally just set foot on the battlefield. No battle damage, armor is perfectly polished and boots are only just beginning to accumulate iron-rich oxidized dust. Other than 3 redemptors and the outriders from Indomitus - and maybe a couple of turrets when those come out - this is an infantry-only army.
My idea for the color scheme didn’t quite work out the way I’d hoped, but I’m happy with it and will proceed.
Airbrush: Vallejo black primer > Vallejo black metal > stormhost silver > thinned black templar contrast > badger gloss varnish > spazstix color changing paint. The idea was to try a metallic zenithal highlight and then apply a thin layer of black over it. Turns out the pigments in the black Templar, even thinned, is just so dense as to subdue the zenithal effect almost entirely. So be it. It produced a nice metallic black that I’m happy with.
Here’s what I’ve got so far: test Suppressor:


I used a flash with the pictures because the light was fading. The silver is being over-emphasized compared to natural light, as a result.
Next step is to spray a couple subtle layers/passes with this paint:

Looking forward to seeing how they turn out, then moving on to the rest of the model with a brush.