Ash said
Thanks, I will. By the way, how tricky is the painting? I mean, the miniatures are pretty tiny.
Well Painting 10mm is very pleasant.
You can paint a unit with the same effort than an detail 28mm. If you paint quick without detail, it will look good in the gametable (much better than the same paint job in 28 or 15mm); if you decide to go on detail with highlights and shades it will look great in close up but in the table will look good (more or less) than the others. If your paint is superb there is no option, in the table will look amazing, but somtimes (in my opinion) it is not worth the effort.
What I usually do is paint with my mood, sometimes I am tired of the day so I paint quick without detail, but when my body ask me for paintjobs I spend lots of time painting a single unit. When playing it is not really seen the difference.
I think a good advise when painting warmaster is going on with bright pure colors, because as much the figure is colorfull as much pretty will be seen/remark in the battletable. So the hyperrealistic dark/brown colors (e.g. the color scheme of lord of the ring 28mm range shown in white dwarf) do not make the most of the figure. That's my advice from my own experience.
Another advice is trying to paint more detail on the leaders (generals and so on) because when playing people use to take their attention to that figures. For banners exists transfers with heraldic motives and this simplyfy the free-hand paintjob.
To finish, painting warmaster is more easier than you can imagine, especially games workshop figures because are superb sculpted, so they paint itself alone

(well I am trying to say that when the figures is good sculpted is easier to paint).
Sorry for my english and I hope you could understand what i am trying to say

go on the warmaster! it is good game