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Could be a little time consuming but you're exactly right. Just mask the portions you need kept as-is. Then spray your next sheen. Let that dry for a few hours, mask it, then spray the third sheen. It will look great when it's finished. Just needs a little extra work.
Chad
God, Family, Models...
At the plate: 1/48 Airfix Bf109 & 1/35 Tamiya Famo
On deck: Who knows!
GMorrison Teenage Modeler I'm guessing that you should mask the parts that don't have the sheen Correct as usual, King Friday. Bill
Teenage Modeler I'm guessing that you should mask the parts that don't have the sheen
Correct as usual, King Friday.
Bill
Made you Look
Teenage ModelerI'm guessing that you should mask the parts that don't have the sheen
Modeling is an excuse to buy books.
How do I separate a different sheen of clear coat for a different portion of the same part?
Here is an example:
I glued the engine block in one piece. The block is not supposed to be in one sheen, but 3 different sheens of clear coat (gloss, matte, semi gloss).
How do I separate each portion of the engine, for a different type of sheen?
I'm guessing that you should mask the parts that don't have the sheen.
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