The main goals on my painting desk for 2026 were my Heroquest expansions. In order to get all the Heroes for my games, I splurged last year and picked up all the Expansions with Heroes. This left me with a pretty hefty Pile of Potential to work through. Before I could start working on my Late Roman project for Osprey I was going to need to clear this backlog out. Early this year, I had managed to finish of Rise of the Dread Moon so now it was time to focus on The Frozen Horror expansion.
This expansion was a snow themed adventure for the barbarian and his pals. That was going to be a very different look from what the Elves looked like. There were an assortment of winter themed minis and a number of human mercenaries to go in this set. Before I began traveling, I was able to get them all base coated and stored away in my WIP bin.
Not much to say about the undercoating process you do not all ready know. Grey Seer undercoat GW spray, dark grey cheap acrylic wash, and then a dry brushing of cheap acrylic white to get them to this point. I have had good results with this undercoat process for speedpaints. The first minis I painted from this set were the Yeti. They were a test of my mobile painting station.
With the pre-amble out of the way, it was time to get going on the rest of the models.
| This gives you an idea of my painting space |
From here, I packed them back up and let them dry overnight. At this point, their basecoats were on and they were ready for a nice coat of Light Wash and then touch-ups and highlights. Nothing too fancy. Once done with those, I painted the bases with Runic Grey and then the traditional black trim to finish them up.
Not a bad first effort at painting while on the road. However, I still had things to paint for The Frozen Horror expansion. After the Polar War Bears, it was time to get a bit more fiddly-foes. I grabbed the Gremlins out. These guys are really annoying because they do not do damage, but they DO steal your stuff! Gross. I wanted them to have the same skin tones as the Yetis I painted, so I went back to the Magic Blue and Holy White mix and three drops of thinner as their skin tone.
I used a watered down Voidshield Blue as the base for their hair and beards. I wanted them to look "icy". From there, I painted over it with Holy White and then drybushed it with cheap acrylic White. I did the same thing with their wands too. The rest of the minis were standard natural colors like Hardened Leather, Pallid Bone, Crusader Skin, Runic Grey, Gravelord Grey, etc. The details were mostly Golden Loot from the Metallic Speedpaint sets. They were washed with a light wash and then touched up again. The bases were the usual stuff of Runic Grey with a black rim.
From there I had a few loose doors. Two were ones I had missed from one of the Elven Sets, but I am not sure which one and it doesn't matter because I am painting them now. The other two were snow and ice themed doors from The Frozen Horror. The two sets of doors would require very different painting techniques to complete them. I had two wooden ones and two iron ones. Typically, one of those types is the start of the Quest while the other is an exit.
For the Frozen doors, I used a Dark Wood for the planks, while for the Elf ones I used Sand Golem. That tracked as all my Elf wood is Sand Golem paint. The iron ones I used Broadsword Silver and for the Elf one I used Pallid Bone. Again, my elf metal was always Pallid Bone so I was staying consistent. Where the elf one was covered in vines, The Frozen Horror doors had icicles and snow on them.
The elf doors were fairly straight forward using Magic Blue and Plasmatic Bolt for the runes and such. The stone was Graveyard Grey and the vines were Malignant Green. Give it all a Light Wash and they were done.
The frost and snow of the other doors required a different effort. The runes were Magic Blue, this time with Markers. The stone was Graveyard Grey. The fixtures were Broadsword Silver from the Metallic Sets. The snow and icicles I started with a Voidshield Blue wash. Then, I painted over it with a light coat of Holy White. Once dry, I drybrushed cheap white acrylic over it with a make-up brush. I used watered down black to give the whole thing a dark wash.
Final Thoughts

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