Citadel (Games Workshop) · Technical

Stirland Battlemire Paint Guide

Citadel (Games Workshop) Technical #70490D
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Equivalents by Brand
Brand Colour Delta E Match
Citadel (Games Workshop) Stirland Mud 11.23 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Typhus Corrosion 19.85 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Spiritstone Red 20.25 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Blood for the Blood God 24.74 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Astrogranite 25.35 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Nurgle's Rot 26.24 Distant
Citadel (Games Workshop) Mordant Earth 29.26 Distant
Army Painter Dark Rust 16.19 Distant
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Stirland Battlemire paint guide

Stirland Battlemire Paint: Colour, Type & Equivalents

As a Technical paint, this product delivers a special effect — texture, crackle, gloss, or medium — rather than a standard colour coat. Orange hues add warmth and contrast to fabrics, flames, and faction-specific trim details..
The closest Stirland Battlemire equivalent is the strongest substitute listed on this page.

Stirland Battlemire is a technical from Citadel (Games Workshop), commonly used for armour plates, cloth, and trim work.

Quick Equivalents

  • Closest equivalent: the strongest substitute listed on this page
  • Vallejo equivalent: no close Vallejo equivalent
  • Army Painter equivalent: no close Army Painter equivalent

How to Use Stirland Battlemire

This paint is typically used for:

  • basecoating warm orange armour and weapons
  • layering and highlighting on large flat surfaces

Apply it over a suitable primer and build layers gradually. Coverage sits around reliable, so two thin coats usually give a more stable finish than one heavy pass, especially over a dark primer.

Paint Behavior and Tips

Consider the following when working with this paint:

  • Coverage: reliable — affects how many coats are needed over primer
  • Dilution: controlled thinning — keeping the right ratio maintains flow and prevents brushmarks
  • Interaction with washes and highlights: always run a highlight pass to verify the tone does not shift after drying

A good equivalent should remain stable after shading and highlighting. Test this alternative on the same primer and in the same recipe before switching a whole unit.

Miniature Painting Tips

For best results with Stirland Battlemire on Warhammer and other miniature projects:

  • Use the same primer across the project to keep tonal consistency
  • Test on a spare part before applying to a full unit
  • Compare after shading and highlights, not just the base coat

Even small differences can become visible on a finished miniature. This match may behave differently on textured surfaces like cloth, fur, and metal trim once the full recipe is applied.

Conclusion

Choosing the right Stirland Battlemire equivalent ensures consistent results across your painting workflow. Use this page as a paint conversion chart to compare the Vallejo equivalent, the Army Painter equivalent, and other close options before committing to a full army.

A paint guide is most valuable when it connects colour, handling, and recipe context in one place.

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Direct answer
How should you use Stirland Battlemire on miniatures?

Stirland Battlemire is a technical paint from Citadel (Games Workshop). Use it in thin coats and verify the surrounding recipe on a test miniature.

  • Citadel (Games Workshop) · Technical
  • Technical · #70490D

Method

This summary is built from the local usage notes, structured paint detail data, and the same Delta-E matching system used across ChromaStack.

Limits

Check finish and coverage on a test miniature if your workflow depends on a very specific texture or transparency.