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As a layer paint, this colour is formulated for translucency and smooth transitions over an existing basecoat. Orange hues add warmth and contrast to fabrics, flames, and faction-specific trim details..
The closest Bestigor Flesh equivalent is BEIGE RED (AK Interactive) (ΔE 3.4).
For the Bestigor Flesh equivalent Vallejo, Tan (72.066) (Vallejo Game Color) (ΔE 5.3).
The best Bestigor Flesh Army Painter equivalent is Demigod Flames (Army Painter) (ΔE 5.5).
These 3 substitutes are ranked by Delta-E accuracy. Each entry includes a behaviour comment.
The closest cross-brand equivalent to Bestigor Flesh in the current local catalogue is BEIGE RED from AK Interactive (Delta-E 3.42).
Matches are computed from the local paint catalogue with Delta-E CIEDE2000. Lower values mean a closer visual match on the miniature.
Finish, opacity, flow, and bottle format are not captured by Delta-E alone. Test the substitute if the recipe relies on a specific behaviour.
Before adopting a substitute, check these points specific to this layer paint:
Bestigor Flesh is a layer paint from Citadel (Games Workshop). Its specific pigment load, drying behaviour, and finish set it apart from other paints in the same category, which is why a direct substitute needs to match more than just the colour value.
The closest Vallejo option is Tan (72.066) (Delta E 5.34).
Yes, Bestigor Flesh is currently part of the Citadel (Games Workshop) range. Check local stock or equivalent alternatives if the pot is hard to source.
Check Delta-E, finish type, coverage, opacity, and behaviour over your chosen primer. Run a full test with one shade and one highlight pass before applying the substitute to an entire unit.
As a layer paint, this colour is formulated for translucency and smooth transitions over an existing basecoat. Orange hues add warmth and contrast to fabrics, flames, and faction-specific trim details..
The closest Bestigor Flesh equivalent is BEIGE RED (AK Interactive) (ΔE 3.4).
For the Bestigor Flesh equivalent Vallejo, Tan (72.066) (Vallejo Game Color) (ΔE 5.3).
The best Bestigor Flesh Army Painter equivalent is Demigod Flames (Army Painter) (ΔE 5.5).
As a layer paint, this colour is formulated for translucency and smooth transitions over an existing basecoat. Orange hues add warmth and contrast to fabrics, flames, and faction-specific trim details.. Chair-orange chaud. Layer peau Beastmen/créatures, cuir. Monte vers Kislev Flesh.
The closest Bestigor Flesh equivalent is BEIGE RED (AK Interactive) with Delta E 3.4. For a Bestigor Flesh equivalent Vallejo match, Tan (72.066) (Vallejo Game Color) with Delta E 5.3 is the closest pick. The best Bestigor Flesh Army Painter equivalent is Demigod Flames (Army Painter) with Delta E 5.5.
The closest Vallejo match is Tan (72.066) (Vallejo Game Color) with Delta E 5.3.
The best Army Painter option is Demigod Flames (Army Painter) with Delta E 5.5.
As a layer paint, Bestigor Flesh is designed for smooth transitions and controlled highlights. The colour sits in the warm orange range, with medium coverage and semi-transparent opacity over dessus Mournfang Brown.
Layer paints are more translucent than base paints by design. Bestigor Flesh builds colour gradually, which means a substitute must also layer well without going opaque too quickly or requiring too many coats.
For best results, thin Bestigor Flesh to moderate thinning and apply in multiple passes. A substitute that dries too fast or too matte will change how the glaze settles on the model.
The warm orange tone of Bestigor Flesh works best when layered from a darker base. Check that the substitute blends gradually without hard edges between coats.
Bestigor Flesh is commonly used for edge highlights and surface detail. A substitute with different thinning behaviour will alter how precisely you can place the highlight.
Mournfang Brown, Agrax Earthshade, Kislev Flesh and Skrag Brown are common companions to this layer. They were chosen in the original recipe because their coverage, drying speed, and finish layer in the same workflow without forcing extra corrections.
A layer paint substitute only becomes trustworthy once it survives the same primer, shade, and highlight sequence as the original recipe.
Looking at the surrounding palette matters because a near match can still push the finished model warmer, colder, or flatter than expected.
That combination of colour distance, finish, and recipe context is what makes a layer paint substitute reliable on an actual miniature.
That combination of colour distance, finish, and recipe context is what makes a substitute reliable on an actual miniature.
A paint substitute only becomes trustworthy once it survives the same primer, shade, and highlight sequence as the original recipe.
Looking at the surrounding palette matters too, because a near match can still push the finished model warmer, colder, flatter, or glossier than expected.
That is why the page keeps the recommendation anchored to painting workflow instead of treating Delta-E alone as the final decision.
A useful equivalent page should also reduce buying mistakes: the closer colour is not always the safer option if the bottle dries glossier, covers faster, or behaves differently on large armour panels.