Imperial Fists Heavy Support Autocannon Squad Continued

My Imperial Fists in the Age of Darkness project continues this week with the third member of my Heavy Support autocannon squad.

Painting & Modelling

The LED effects used for this miniature were identical to those I described for the previous member of the squad. The helmet and the autocannon muzzle effects used the techniques outlined in my LED Muzzle Flare tutorial. Again, I made one slight alteration; instead of the yellow 0805 SMD used for the muzzle flare in the tutorial, I used a larger TruOpto OSHR7331A-KL 1.8mm Yellow LED and a 20 ohm resistor. I chose this LED to make the autocannon muzzle flare larger and more impressive than a bolter muzzle flare, which is what the tutorial is focused on. Otherwise, all the methods used are the same.

I had originally planned some minor cosmetic modifications to the helmet and upper torso of this miniature to give the impression of a variant armour mark, just to add a little visual variety to the unit. But the pose didn’t really lend itself to what I’d pictured, so I’ve decided to save these changes for the Tactical Squads and leave the Heavy Support Squads as standard MKVI.

This miniature was painted using the recipes exactly as described in this post.

That’s all for today, but I’ll be back again soon with more Imperial Fists! As ever, thanks very much for reading, and please remember you can also find me sharing my work on InstagramThreadsBluesky and Mastodon. Or if you prefer you can subscribe to my website by entering your email in the box below to receive updates whenever I post a new blog article or tutorial.

Imperial Fists Heavy Support Autocannon

My new Age of Darkness project continues this week with the second member of my Imperial Fists Heavy Support autocannon squad.

Painting & Modelling

The LED effects in the helmet and the autocannon muzzle are achieved using the techniques outlined in my LED Muzzle Flare tutorial. There was a slight alteration; instead of the yellow 0805 SMD used for the muzzle flare in the tutorial, I used a larger TruOpto OSHR7331A-KL 1.8mm Yellow LED and a 20 ohm resistor. I chose this LED to make the autocannon muzzle flare larger and more impressive than a bolter muzzle flare, which is what the tutorial is focused on. Otherwise, all the methods used are the same.

This miniature was painted using the recipes described in my post last week. While I do want to keep the markings and insignia fairly uniform in this army – they are disciplined Imperial Fists after all – I also want to include a small amount of quirks and customisations to their armour to give the impression they’ve been on campaign for a long time. This miniature was created to give a baseline as the ‘stock’ member of the squad, but you will see some additional customisation creeping in for the next three marines.

That’s all for today, thanks very much for reading, and please remember you can also find me sharing my work on InstagramThreadsBluesky and Mastodon. Or if you prefer you can subscribe to my website by entering your email in the box below to receive updates whenever I post a new blog article or tutorial.

Imperial Fists in the Age of Darkness (2025)

This week I’m looking at the start of a new project – Imperial Fists in the Age of Darkness! I’ve had various iterations of Horus Heresy Imperial Fists armies over the years (plus Golden Demon projects), most of them heavily converted with resin and incorporating some of my early LED experiments. However, besides individual display pieces, this is a theme that I haven’t touched since around 2019, although I’ve long promised myself yet another Imperial Fists full army reboot with modern plastics.

Earlier this year, as we started to hear rumours about a third edition of the Age of Darkness rule set, interest in Horus Heresy gaming began to grow in my games group. So I decided this was the perfect time to start planning this project. Since then we’ve seen the preview of the Saturnine box, which has only stoked interest further.

The First 500 Points

A few weeks ago I planned out and purchased the first 500 points of this new force, as set out below. My favourite armour mark is MkVI (as long-time readers will know) and thankfully these were readily available. This force is based on the Age of Darkness second edition army list, since at this stage we don’t know what the new points costs will be. But I can’t imagine they will change dramatically.

  • Centurion (Castellan Consul)
  • 10 Tactical Marines
  • 10 Tactical Marines
  • 5 Heavy Support Marines (Autocannons)

This is my initial plan. After that, well, we’ll see what’s in the new Liber Astartes! But I am looking forward to getting my hands on the Saturnine Terminators

In terms of lore, I’m picturing a force that initially remained behind with Dorn on Terra and so weren’t part of the Retribution Fleet at Phall. But after news of the Dropsite Massacre spread they were then sent out far and wide within Segmentum Solar to assist in battles like Mars, Cthonia, Beta-Garmon, and generally shoring-up the defences along the road to Terra.

Heavy Support Sergeant

I started with a Heavy Support squad on the reasoning that they were likely to be deployed at the back of the board, so this was the perfect place to get back into my stride with painting yellow. The LED effects on this miniature were created using the techniques exactly as described in my LED Eye Lens tutorial.

The pointing left hand is the open left hand from the Legion Melee Weapons Upgrade Set, but with the lower fingers bent into a closed position and the gaps re-sculpted with modelling putty. Using this hand meant that I needed to cut the sculpted hand from the upper handle on the autocannon and replace it with a short length of plastic rod.

I wanted the sergeant to be posed as though directing his squad towards their target, while the other marines in the squad will be in more traditional firing positions.

Painting Imperial Fists in the Age of Darkness

If I have a bad habit as a painter, it’s that I have to always try and apply my highest standard to every miniature I paint. This isn’t necessarily compatible with painting the 50 – 70 infantry miniatures that you might expect to see in an Age of Darkness army. The recipes below represent a compromise that I’ve settled on between a high standard, and a technique that won’t take forever.

The miniature was undercoated with Colour Forge ‘Sunset Yellow’ spray. All other paints are Citadel unless specified otherwise.

  • Yellow Armour
  • Yriel Yellow layer (2-3 thin coats)
  • Casandora Yellow shade
  • Fuegan Orange shade in deeper recesses
  • Flash Gitz Yellow fine highlight
  • Dorn Yellow fine highlight
  • White Scar dot highlight on sharp corners
  • Black Armour & Gun Casings
  • Chaos Black basecoat
  • Eshin Grey highlight
  • Dawnstone fine highlight
  • Administratum Grey dot highlight on sharp corners
  • Black Under Suit
  • Corvus Black basecoat
  • Eshin Grey highlight
  • Silver Metallics
  • Leadbelcher basecoat
  • Nuln Oil shade
  • Runefang Silver highlight
  • Gold Metallics
  • Retributor Armour basecoat
  • Agrax Earthshade shade
  • Runefang Silver highlight
  • Brown Leather
  • 50:50 Rhinox Hide:Doombull Brown basecoat
  • Nuln Oil shade
  • Doombull Brown highlight
  • Skrag Brown fine highlight
  • Karak Stone fine highlight on corners
  • Armour Chipping
  • Rhinox Hide applied with sponge
  • Flash Gitz Yellow fine highlight under chip
  • Dorn Yellow fine highlight under chip
  • Freehand Insignia
  • Corvus Black layer
  • Imperial Fists Yellow thin glaze
  • Decals
  • Ardcoat gloss varnish basecoat
  • Coat area in Micro Set
  • Apply decal and allow to dry
  • Coat decal in Micro Sol, brushing outwards
  • Lahmian Medium layer
  • Imperial Fists Yellow thin glaze
  • Martian Earth (base)
  • Mournfang Brown basecoat
  • Martian Ironearth technical paint
  • Jokareo Orange drybrush
  • Lugganath Orange drybrush
  • Doombull Brown glaze on miniature’s feet and ankles
  • Tuskgor Fur glaze on miniature’s feet, ankles and shins
  • Rocks (base)
  • Mournfang Brown basecoat
  • Reikland Fleshshade shade
  • Jokareo Orange drybrush
  • Lugganath Orange drybrush
  • Skull (base)
  • Wraithbone basecoat
  • Skeleton Horde contrast
  • Ushabti Bone glaze on raised areas
  • Screaming Skull dot highlight
  • Grass (base)
  • Mordian Corpsegrass Tufts
  • Reikland Fleshshade in base of tuft
  • Ushabti Bone drybrush to tuft
  • Screaming Skull drybrush to top of tuft

That’s all for today. I do have quite a few miniatures for this project at various stages on my workbench, so hopefully it won’t be too long before my next update. Thanks very much for reading, and please remember you can also find me sharing my work on InstagramThreadsBluesky and Mastodon. Or if you prefer you can subscribe to my website by entering your email in the box below to receive updates whenever I post a new blog article or tutorial.

Sergeant Khons, Sons of Horus

This week I’d like to present Sergeant Khons of the Sons of Horus. This miniature and its LED effects have been specially commissioned by the team at Green Stuff World to show off some of their 3D printed accessories and LED kits. This is my second Green Stuff World commission after Themistius Kalden and his energy shield that I posted last week.

Modelling

This miniature was intended to demonstrate the Green Stuff World 3D Printed Plasma Effects. When I was asked to incorporate the plasma effects into a miniature, I immediately knew this effect would look awesome on a space marine with a plasma pistol. I settled on the Sons of Horus for the paint scheme as I really I enjoyed painting Brother Amset, and I’ve been looking for an excuse to paint another Sons of Horus marine ever since.

The equipment and pose of the miniature were influenced by sergeant on the Legion MKVI Tactical Squad box art, shown above. I swapped the mask for a bare head as a shouting or grimacing face combined with an LED muzzle flare really helps to sell the ‘mid-action’ pose.

As part of the commission I filmed all the stages of the build process, which you can see in the video below.

A full PDF tutorial for this build will be released via Green Stuff World soon. When it is, I’ll add it here and link to it from my tutorial section. In the meantime to get you started here’s a list of all the components and consumables I used. The miniature is from the Legion MKVI Tactical Squad kit.

Painting

My Sons of Horus armour recipe can be found in this previous post. For the face, I used my standard Pale Skin recipe. During the painting stage the plasma effect was given a thin blue glaze. This was done to help give the cool white LEDs a blue tint, and also to give the plasma effect some visual interest when the LED was switched off. The iconography on this miniature came from the transfer sheet included in the box.

LED effects aside, I’m really pleased with the paint job on this model. I think it’s one of the best space marines that I’ve painted to date – if I do say so myself!

That’s all for today, I hope you enjoyed this miniature and the demonstration of the Green Stuff World kits. Thanks very much for reading, and please remember you can also find me sharing my work on InstagramThreadsTwitter/XBluesky and Mastodon.

Oh, and if you have time, please consider voting for my miniature painting in the CRIT Awards!

“Burn traitor!” on WarhammerTV

Sorry, I know that regular readers are probably tired of seeing this diorama by now, but yesterday I was lucky enough to have my work shown on the Warhammer TV Twitch channel again! “Burn traitor!” featured alongside the work of other hobbyists on this Friday’s ‘Hang Out and Paint’ episode on Warhammer TV (Friday 12th February episode, at around the 5:30 mark, if anyone would like to see it).

It’s always an honour to have had my work exhibited in this way, and a big thank you to Em, Alex and the rest of the Warhammer Community Team for their kind words about this miniature!