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Who to paint digital camo? (CADPAT, MARPAT, ACU, Italian)

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  • Member since
    February 2003
Who to paint digital camo? (CADPAT, MARPAT, ACU, Italian)
Posted by xavier on Tuesday, March 28, 2006 10:01 AM
Hi all:
How do we paint digital camo for 1/35 scale figures? How do we imitate CADPAT, MARPAT, ACU and the Italian digital camo Finnish M/05?
Thanks!

xavier

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Valrico, FL
Posted by HeavyArty on Tuesday, March 28, 2006 10:59 AM

Taken from an on-line FSM acrticle:

 

Salt Weathering and Digital Camouflage


By Mike Pabis
Adapted from FSM article

Items needed:
1. Paint brush
2. About a tablespoon of ordinary table salt
3. Water
4. Airbrush and paint
5. Toothpick

Time Involved: minimum two days (mostly drying time)

Steps to weather models with salt
1. Complete your model to the point where you have primered the pieces you want to weather.
2. Determine what you want your bottom coat to be. This should be the color that you want to show through the topcoat when everything is complete. Example, if you are planning on showing chipped paint on an aircraft, your bottom coat would be aluminum and the topcoat would be the aircraft’s color.
3. Spray on the bottom coat and let dry for at least 24 hours. Note, try not to use the metalizer paints as water beads off the dried paint and makes it very difficult to place water where you want.
4. Once the bottom coat has sufficiently dried, wet a paintbrush with water. Use a thinner brush for most applications. “Paint” the water over the area where you want to show the bottom coat. On an aircraft, this would be at the edges of the wings, worn areas of the fuselage and areas where other items come in contact with the aircraft. Armored vehicles would show through on the corners and exposed edges. Basically, think where paint would chip off on a vehicle and apply the water there.
5. After applying the water, get your table salt and sprinkle the salt on the wet areas. Depending on how much weathering you want to show determines how much salt to sprinkle. It might be best to use a little bit more than you think, as salt crystals are very small. The salt will basically glue itself to the model when it is mixed with a tiny amount of water. Let this dry overnight.
6. Spray on your topcoat over the model and areas where you applied your salt to and let dry at least 24 hours.
7. Once everything is dry, either with your fingertip or a flat toothpick brush the salt off your model. Sometimes the salt can stick a little bit, so apply just a little bit more pressure to pull it off. Depending on how much you put on, it should only take a few minutes to pull off. As you pull the salt off, you will see the bottom coat start to show through. Now you are done with the weathering. Essentially, what you have done is recreate the exact process of paint chipping.

Steps for creating digital camouflage on figures
1. Salt is the perfect tool for creating this new, difficult to paint pattern. It is a cubic crystal, which makes it great for creating the cubic digital camouflage patterns. Rather than spend hours gently dabbing on microscopic dots that will drive you crazy, you can have this done in a couple minutes over a few days.
2. All steps are the same as weathering with salt. However, there a few things that needs to be done slightly different. Think of painting the new Marine Corps MARPAT woodland camouflage pattern. There are three primary colors and one secondary color: black, brown, buff, and green.
3. In step 3, make sure the bottom coat is your darkest coat. Using the example of the MARPAT pattern, this would be black.
4. Repeat steps 3-5 with each subsequently lighter color – brown, buff and green. Make sure that green is the final coat. You will be adding a lot of salt over time, so brush it on gently in order to not soften and remove the previous layers. You will have three layers of salt and four layers of paint when finished.
5. Follow step 7 and remove all the salt. What you are left with is the new digital camouflage pattern. Quick and easy. This process can be repeated with any of the new camo patterns, desert, gray, blues, etc. Always start with your dark bottom coat and use the next lighter color at each subsequent step.

 

Haven't tried it myself yet, but Good luck!

Gino P. Quintiliani - Field Artillery - The KING of BATTLE!!!

Check out my Gallery: https://app.photobucket.com/u/HeavyArty

"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf." -- George Orwell

  • Member since
    February 2003
Posted by xavier on Tuesday, March 28, 2006 1:04 PM
Hvy Arty:
Thanks! I'll have to look around the site to find the article to download it :D
xacier

  • Member since
    September 2004
  • From: kitchener ont. canada
Posted by curtis remington on Tuesday, March 28, 2006 5:10 PM
or paint the dominent colour first then use a square toothpick for the other colours, and for gen.1 cadpat spray a very light coat of white on after so it will look faded. all gen.1 cadpat uniforms are faded by now if they have been used.
Any thing can be fixed with enough gun tape and para cord
  • Member since
    July 2013
Posted by DURR on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 10:57 AM

say Gino the same thing with armor?

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Valrico, FL
Posted by HeavyArty on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 11:55 AM
Yup, it replicates paint chips well.  That is what the first part of the article was about.

Gino P. Quintiliani - Field Artillery - The KING of BATTLE!!!

Check out my Gallery: https://app.photobucket.com/u/HeavyArty

"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf." -- George Orwell

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 7:32 PM
I worked this up to support my explanation in an earlier topic on this subject a few months ago. The hows have already been adequately covered by Heavy Arty and the others, so I have little to add there.




  • Member since
    February 2004
  • From: Green Lantern Corps HQ on Oa
Posted by LemonJello on Thursday, April 6, 2006 1:12 AM

That looks really darn good, plymonkey. 

I've done a version of MARPAT on an A-10 using stencils I made with my wife's paper punches.  It's not bad for a first attempt, I may try to refine the whole process on another one of my builds down the road.

I'm definitely going to give the salt technique a try on some figures, I'd like to have some Marines in current uniforms to go with some of my builds.

A day in the Corps is like a day on the farm; every meal is a banquet, every paycheck a fortune, every formation a parade... The Marine Corps is a department of the Navy? Yeah...The Men's Department.
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