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How to Glaze Paint For Miniatures: Next Level Painting Tutorial

EXERCISE Are your paints really thin enough? This week Kenny from Next Level Painting is showing us how to glaze paint for miniatures- check it out!

Kenny is no stranger to all things painting, as he cranks out streams and videos to help other hobbyists learn to paint better. Kenny Usually does painting tutorials, but to paint, you also need to practice! This week he helps us by adding a new tool to our arsenal, glazing! Glazing is hard to learn but easy to execute after you get it down-pat a few practice runs, and you’ll have it down for sure.

If you want to see more of his great content, check out his Patreon here! Or, if you want to see his previous tutorials, you can check them out here!

How to Glaze Paint For Miniatures: Next Level Painting Tutorial

How to Glaze Paint For MiniaturesFor this exercise, get a smooth pre-shade with whites and blacks to prep the model for all the glazing you are about to do.

How to Glaze Paint For MiniaturesWhen you are prepping your paint to glaze with, try to get it as thin as you are comfortable with. When you glaze, you can always add another layer, so keep this in mind when you begin your first coat.

How to Glaze Paint For MiniaturesFor Kenny’s first color, he chose a nice bright red. However, you’ll notice because he made it so thin, it’s not that saturated when he applies it. He goes over the red areas about three times!

Glazing on Skin

How to Glaze Paint For MiniaturesYou can even use glazes on the skin. The main difference here with skin tones is the first layer. You may not even see a difference immediately; however, after the first, there will be some serious differences as the flesh tone starts to settle in. An important note is that the more layers you use, the closer you are to just base coating with extra steps, be sure to take advantage of your pre-shade! Less is more!

The More Layers, the Better

How to Glaze Paint For MiniaturesThe next color he tackles is blue. Like the red, he keeps the saturation low using fewer layers. The more layers you add, the more saturated the color will become.

glazing doneUsing these ideas, he also glazes the hair and fire. Always remember you can make the areas as saturated as you want. The key is thin paints and being controlled with each layer you add.

With that, the exercise is finished!

Be sure to check out the video below for all the details!

If you want to see how to take it to the next level with all his other awesome videos, check out Kenny’s Patreon

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Will you be trying this method for how to glaze paint for miniatures?

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About the Author: Travis Pasch

Travis Pasch

travis pasch writer headshot profile bioJob Title: Head Writer & Editor

Joined: 2019

Socials: @paschbass 

Bio: Dark Eldar Dracon and Warhammer 40k hobbyist since the third edition in 1998. He also loves camping because you can only paint so much! He joined the Spikey Bits team in 2019 and has been the main daily writer since 2020.

Maybe one day, he’ll finish converting all his Ad Mech models and turn into a true tech enjoyer, complete with sad and happy robot noises!