Crystal objective markers and scatter terrain

Crystals from Bad Squiddo Games painted in high contrast pink and purple, large enough to be used as scatter terrain or objective markers, against a desert backdrop with an imperial guardsman for scale
The money shot

I’ve been banging on about the Gorgon Crystals campaign a lot recently, and for it I needed some battlefield tokens to represent the.. uh… crystals. I’ve mucked about with carving crystalline structures out of plastic sprue before, but I didn’t really have the fortitude to create at least half a dozen markers out of the stuff.

Cue Bad Squiddo Games! I’ve been following their stuff for a while now, and even picked up some of their Cargo Supplies and Food Supplies kits to build my market scene (which is still lying unpainted in a box somewhere…), and knew their set of crystals terrain would be perfect.

p a c k i d g e

I put in the order and waited. Even though it was a busy post-Christmas period, it still turned up within days of me ordering. A++ service!

A blister pack of resin crystals from Bad Squiddo games
p a c k i d g e

The minis came out the blister perfectly – no mould lines in sight. The only tidying I did was shaving down one or two bottoms where they’d been clipped from their sprue. A two-minute job and it’s time to hit the spray.

eight resin crystal pieces of scatter terrain, cleaned up and unpainted

Blue tack woes

Now, in my haste, I didn’t give them a proper soapy bath that you should always do with resin minis. This is to clean off any releasing agent to make paint adhere better and make them a little less slippy.

I was too proud and lazy to do this – after all – what’s the worst that could happen?

Eight resin crystal scatter terrain pieces undercoated black

Turns out, the releasing agent is basically vaseline for blue tack. I had to hold them with needle nose pliers and superglue them to paint pots because blue tack wouldn’t even pretend to hold onto them.

I kept telling myself that yes, this was a far easier and more efficient method than just doing what you’re supposed to do.

Time for the pink

I knew I wanted a purple/pink colour scheme to add that alien quality I was looking for, but I didn’t know how to paint crystals. I knew there was something funny about the direction you blend colours to make them look like prisms, but I couldn’t even begin to figure it out. Time for a tutorial!

A cursory google provided me with this great tutorial on painting gems/crystals, and I just substituted the blues for pinks and crimsons to produce an effect I was really happy with.

Close up of a small resin crystal obejctive marker glued to a paint pot lid, the first layers of purple paint on each face showing the blending technique

It was, however, quite time consuming, and I was sick of the sight of pink and purple by the end of four very long evenings of painstaking wet blending. I’m glad I did though, because I think the results speak for themselves!

They’ll appear in plenty of Inquisitor battle reports over the next few weeks, and hopefully I can get more Bad Squiddo bits to paint up in the near future, so watch this space!

Crystals from Bad Squiddo Games painted in high contrast pink and purple, large enough to be used as scatter terrain or objective markers, against a desert backdrop
Crystals from Bad Squiddo Games painted in high contrast pink and purple, large enough to be used as scatter terrain or objective markers, against a desert backdrop with an imperial guardsman for scale
Brightly painted purple crystal scatter terrain pieces set among a some desert ruins on an arid backdrop
a close up of some brightly painted purple crystal scatter terrain pieces set among a some desert ruins on an arid backdrop