Once sized and cut, put a long bead of PVC glue at one end of the banner and tightly roll it around the wire it'll be mounted on. Cover the wire completely and put a bit of weight on it to keep it from unrolling while it dries. Once dry, give the banner a good pull and slide it off the wire. The linen will keep a tube shape, allowing you to swap out banners. This is cool because you'll be able to sport either the fabulous LBMS banners or your own creations as the mood strikes you!
Paint the banner in a dark base color. For white banners, I use light green, light brown or gray for my base. Ideally, your base color will peek through at the finish (see below) giving you shadows and contrast. Experiment with this because just like priming miniatures, your base color affects the look of your finished banner.
After the base coat, I use a pencil to sketch out the shapes I need to paint. I'm not good at freehand so a little care here prevents headaches and overpainting later. I use a ruler to ensure everything is symmetrical and balanced.
Next, work up from your base. I use the triad method, which is a dark base, a mid-tone color and a highlight color to finish. For white, my base was a light green, my mid tone was pale sand and the highlight was white.
Avoid painting an area so thoroughly that you can't see the base color. Leave some of each color peeking through for contrast. To do this, I paint using the side of my brush with a wetbrush to drybrush technique. Wetbrushing is like drybrushing except that you leave a bit more paint on the brush. Wetbrush your first coat and then go lighter (drybrush) with each coat. Sometimes, I paint dots for the final highlight and effect. Ideally, each coat is applied a bit smaller and in a lighter amount than the prior color. This is "seat of the pants" painting and you should experiment to find the look you like.
Once finish with the inside, work up the outside areas in the same method. The dark to light highlights mimic the folds, ripples and shadows in real life on a banner. Your goal is to make the banner look good at 3 feet and not 3 inches. So while it may look odd close up, hold it at arm's length to see how the effect looks at distance. I like to "blackline" to make the banner pop. Below, you can see I used black to create a thin shadow around the white cross for contrast.
Once finished, the banner will be slightly stiff. You can press the banner in from both ends to create a slight "S" bend, making it look like it's catching the wind. A reader suggested that you can heat the banner with a hairdryer to make it more flexible and receptive to shaping as well. I'll try that next time.
Seal it with a matt sealer that'll help protect the paintjob and hold the shape of the banner, and your set! I'd love feedback and suggestions on this as I've just scratched the surface of this topic. If you have tips or tricks you're willing to share, please post them!