Description
Colour Forge Ghoul Grey is a light grey Spray Primer, great if you want a base to highlight up to white from.
Specifically formulated to give exceptional, smooth coverage and a matt finish, providing a great foundation for paint to adhere to, whilst retaining all the details of each and every miniature on your hobby desk.
We’ve packaged our primers in XL-sized, 500ml cans AND make sure they are still affordable with no XL-sized price tag! Not only are our cans HUGE, but they are also highly pressurised. From the first spray to the last, our cans of Colour Forge spray primer will not let you down, delivering outstanding results, each and every time!
Our products are also made in the UK, giving us the ability to ensure stringent quality control over every can that comes off the production line, meaning the quality of each can is consistently high and up to the job.
With over 30 colours to choose from…isn’t it time to #UPYOURHOBBYGAME
Bigger…Better…Cheaper!






Brabbinho (verified owner) –
Colour matched to the Citadel equivalent. Great coverage at a great price
laughingorc (verified owner) –
I’ve used many different sprays primers over the years, but none come close to the Colour Forge range. A great range of colours (including many colour matched to GW paints) is a good start, but the even coverage, steady spray and larger capacity just make these sprays pretty much unbeatable in my book. Ghoul Grey is a perfect match for Grey Seer- I put two of the same models, one undercoated with Ghoul Grey, one with Grey Seer, side-by-side, and couldn’t tell the difference in shade.
sam (verified owner) –
Great Paint, great price
speeve88 (verified owner) –
really nice coverage leaving an easy base to paint from
Ric119 (verified owner) –
Great spray primer, grey seer match
Phill Barrett (verified owner) –
This colour is perfect to be used as a zenithal highlight on your models before you get happy with the contrast paints on your minis or terrain pieces. It something new that I am trying and it works brilliantly when using the contrast paints to help cut down on the shading/highlighting process, even more so on terrain where you want to be doing a quicker job that still looks good (and grimey as you would expect the dark and distant future to feel).