City fight warfare is a great theme for your army. Just follow along this step by step tutorial on simple yet striking urban bases!
Urban bases are my favorite. They go with most armies and it doesn’t take much effort to make them stand out from regular plain grey bases.
World’s Most Efficient Urban Bases
The best trick when it comes to urban bases is pre-built. Using detailed bases is a great time saver.
For the speed painted Ultramarines, I used the Citadel Sector Imperialis set because I had it around. You can get almost any kind of textured resin bases or get some 3D printed.
Once you have those, nothing stops you from adding extra details to spice up some characters or change levels.
Again, in an effort to save time, all bases are done in a single sitting, with some extras in case you want to add models to the list. You can also do the display board, as it should match your bases.
We are going with a brownish-grey look similar to what you can find our one dollar Kindle e-book.
Here’s the secret for Citadel baes: Leave the bases on the sprues to paint them.
In the case of resin bases that don’t come on sprues, glue them with hot glue on a couple of thick cardboard pieces.
All the techniques used for the bases are broad and straightforward, and suited for volume. There’s no point in handling every single base on it’s own. It’s not prettier, it just takes a lot more time.
Step 1
Using your favorite kind of black primer, spray away on all the bases. I like shaker cans a lot more than airbrush primer for this, as I want maximum coverage. You can do 2 thin coats, or a heavier one and touch up with a large brush and thinned down black paint, but you really want bases covered all in black.
Step 2
Light grey spray. When we say light, we don’t mean the grey, we mean the spray. Again, I much prefer a shaker can for this as it’s a lot faster and the result doesn’t really need to be silky smooth.
I used The Army Painter’s Matte Black and Uniform Grey on the army.
Super fine spray on the bases, leaving black showing through. Done right, it will look a lot like dusting or speckles of grey on a black base.
Step 3
Using a dark brown like Citadel Rhinox Hide, apply batches in random areas, focussing mostly in recesses. I like to use my airbrush for this, but I did it for years with thinned paint and a large brush and the results are exactly the same.
Again, you don’t really need to blend that in with anything, we’re just looking for patches of brown.
Step 4
Much like step 3, but with a lighter brown, like Citadel Skrag Brown. It’s pretty much the exact same as the Rhinox, apply it here and there, it can overlap the Rhinox or be in different parts.
After step 4, your bases should look like a chaotic splash of colors, with 40-70% in tones of brown and the rest still showing the black/grey primer.
Step 5
Using a large brush, we’re going to blend in all the colors using a light grey. And this time we mean light grey as in the color. Citadel Celestra Grey is my weapon of choice for this.
Drybrush the entire base with grey, building up the color in 1 or 2 light coats. The chalky look of drybrush will make your concrete lifelike and blend in the various tones under. Don’t over do it, you still want your 4 previous steps to show.
Step 6
Same brush, same technique, this time using Ulthuan Grey and going really lightly over some raised areas only.
Step 7 (Optional)
Not really optional, but situational. If there are additional details on the bases, like shell casings, skulls and cadavers, now is a the time to give them some love. Unless you know what you’re doing and which model is going on top of a specific base, don’t over do it on these details or make them pop too much, you want to bases to complement the model, not the other way around.
Step 8
Clip the bases from the sprues ( or unglue them from your cardboard ), glue models on them, and paint the edges with black.
If you want to go further into the techniques for these bases be sure to get the dollar e-book with these techniques.