Citadel Paints – How to Start (Without Stress or Mistakes)
Paints are not "just paints" – Warhammer has a system
Newbies often think paints are just paints. But for miniatures, a different rule applies: you build layers.
Not because it’s overly complicated, but because light and shadow turn a figure into a model – not a flat piece of plastic.
Once you understand the difference between base layer, shade, and highlight, painting becomes much more fun.
Citadel paints have their own system for this: Base → Shade → Layer → (Dry / Technical / Contrast) → Done.
Good news? You don’t need to use everything. For your first figure, 5–7 paints are enough.
What a beginner really needs
For the first layer – covers plastic.
Creates shadow and depth.
Brings back light and details.
For effects and speeding up work.
Types of Citadel Paints and Their Uses
1) Base – for first layer
Base paints have more pigment. They cover gray or black plastic and create a “foundation surface.”
Thin with a little water or medium. If you don’t, the surface will be rough.
2) Shade – shadow and depth
Liquid paints that flow into recesses and create shadows. This does 80% of the work for you.
Shade “reads” the model’s geometry for you. Everything instantly looks more detailed.
3) Layer – highlights and light
Applied over Base paint. Creates transitions, highlights, edges, and fine details.
4) Dry – for dry brushing
Gel consistency → sticks to brush hairs → ideal for armor ridges, fur, stone, skulls.
5) Contrast – "quick painting"
Applied over a light base, it does Base + Shade + light Layer at once. Perfect for getting to play fast.
6) Technical – effects
Blood, rust, glow, cracks, swamp, etc. Technical paints make the model “come alive.”
Citadel Technical7) Sprays – primer + base in one
The fastest way to start. Pick a background color, spray, and you have the foundation.
Citadel SpraysRecommended paint selection for first miniatures
We keep it universal so it works for anything:
- Abaddon Black – Base (basic black)
- Corax White – Base (light primer base)
- Leadbelcher – Base (metals)
- Wraithbone – Base (contrast-friendly undercoat)
- Agrax Earthshade – Shade (shadow for everything)
- Nuln Oil – Shade (metal & machinery shadow)
- Runefang Steel – Layer (lighter metal)
- Rhinox Hide – Base (leather / boots / bags)
- Bugman’s Glow – Base (skin)
- Seraphim Sepia – Shade (warmer tones)
Most common newbie mistakes
- Direct from pot → no thinning.
- White primer → no Shade → flat model.
- Shade too dark → details lost.
- Trying to paint everything at once → overwhelm.
- Buying 20+ paints → using 6.
How to care for paints (so they don’t dry out)
Paints are not disposable – taking care saves money.
- Don’t leave the pot open longer than necessary.
- Add a drop of medium occasionally (not water).
- Don’t shake – stir (shaking creates bubbles).
- Don’t store in sunlight or near a radiator.
