Painters Block

Started by daveyboy21, 17 August 2013, 07:40:35 AM

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daveyboy21

Hi Guys
It happens to us all every now and then........................and recently I have hit the painters wall. I know I should be at the workbench and cracking on with some painting, but just can't raise the enthusiasm. What do the rest of you guys do to break through the wall and get the brush moving again  :'( :'(
"When you have nothing to loose...........THEN you have Everything to fight for"

OldenBUA

Can't say I'm very productive at the moment (in fact not at all) so maybe I'm not the guy that should be giving advice.

What might work (and worked for me in the past) is to switch to something else. Shelve your current project(s) (literally, just put them away somewhere) and start another. It also helps to actually play a game with what you've got, as this will often fire up the creative juices as well.

Other than that, I feel your pain.  :'(  :(
Water is indeed the essential ingredient of life, because without water you can't make coffee!

Aander lu bin óók lu.

Steve J

I paint very little during the summer months as I just don't feel like I want to be indoors painting when we have long summer evenings to enjoy. However once September arrives, mentally I switch back to painting mode, often driven by the need to finish stuff for the Colours show. Even then I will only paint when in the mood as I will either rush the work or make silly mistakes. Patience is a virtue at these times.

Fenton

I think about rebasing...that usually gives me enough of  a push to get painting again

also the wife saying" Well if your not doing that , theres stuff about the house that needs looking at"...great incentive
If I were creating Pendraken I wouldn't mess about with Romans and  Mongols  I would have started with Centurions , eight o'clock, Day One!

Jim Ando

Hi

I`ve got painters block at the moment.

Usually knock out about 3 Pendraken armies a year plus other bits and pieces.

Only done an American D-Day para BKC army this year so far.

Got a Romano-British and Viking army lying here but I just can`t get going.

Jim

fsn

My incentive is usually looking at what others have done, or reading about techniques. I think "Oh! That's easy." Then prove myself wrong.
Lord Oik of Runcorn (You may refer to me as Milord Oik)

Oik of the Year 2013, 2014; Prize for originality and 'having a go, bless him', 2015
3 votes in the 2016 Painting Competition!; 2017-2019 The Wilderness years
Oik of the Year 2020; 7 votes in the 2021 Painting Competition
11 votes in the 2022 Painting Competition (Double figures!)
2023 - the year of Gerald:
2024 Painting Competition - Runner-Up!

Duke Speedy of Leighton

Until last year my motivation was always 'I need this for a game in X weeks' as I hate unpainted troops in my own armies (however, if other people use unpainted to get the feel of an army, that's really cool).
Since the  birth of number 2 daughter and the slashing of game times, I just switch projects to what I feel like!
:D
You may refer to me as: Your Grace, Duke Speedy of Leighton.
2016 Pendraken Painting Competion Participation Prize  (Lucky Dip Catagory) Winner

petercooman

I usually just wait and don't rush it.

Or if i feel i should get painting again, i start with something half done, so i have quick results when i start paintig, this satisfies me more and gives me more initiative to paint!

Hertsblue

I use a variation on Lemmey's trick. Arrange to play a game with someone for a given day (usually a club game) knowing I need certain figures/vehicles for that game. Pressure, what pressure?  ~X(
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

sunjester

CoC is out in a few days! That's certainly stopped me getting painter's block.  :D

I did go through a couple of dry months at the start of the year, but I find after a while something grab's my interest and I'm OK again.

Shecky

I usually get painter's block when I get a project to the point where I run a game. It doesn't mean all my figures are painted, just painted to the point where I have enough to run a game and my mind wanders to other projects. I start flitting between projects and can't get my mind focused.

The painter's block usually goes away once I get the fire for a new project. Sometimes it's a new rules set which sparks the fire, other times it's sparked by a book I read on a new period.

Leman

Switch to something else. Just rebased some ACW figures and then did some artillery pieces. Will finally paint up some command stands for 1861 Confederates in prep for Longstreet Heavy before switching back to Saxons in 10mm. Oh, and I also put my feet up this afternoon, as it looked like January outside, and started a Nikki Heat novel.
The artist formerly known as Dour Puritan!

nikharwood

Yep - the best advice has already been given: don't try to force it, it'll end in tears  :'(

It'll come - and that first brushstroke, psychologically, can be the tipping point for painting the entire army  :)

It's one of the reasons (probably) that I'll assemble & base everything - it means that I sort the bases first: and this work, which is simple and can be done, with beer, in front of the TV, means that I've started those figures: and they'll get done. Fast. I've had undercoated armies sat in boxes for yonks (those Warmaster Wood Elves & Goblins sat there for over a year - until I decided to bang some paint onto the bases - and then both armies were painted, and on-the-table, within a week).

get2grips

I usually stick on a DVD for the period I'm painting:  LOTR for fantasy;  Band O B, Stalingrad, Private Ryan etc for WW2;  Waterloo, Sharpe for Napoleonics  and so on.

Then sit down with it on in the background and start sploshing.

Also helps if you're rested and not "work stressed".

Gareth

sebigboss79

Same here. Too many projects, table covered (literally) and no start or end in sight.

To me it helps clearing the table of all stuff and then crowding it again in the process of painting. :d