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need help with washes

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  • Member since
    November 2005
need help with washes
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, December 3, 2004 3:22 PM
I am a bit confused about applying washes…

1) I have tank painted my usual army green (using acrylics). I mix oil paints with a heavy dose of thinner (also compatible for oil paints)
2) I apply my wash with a wide bristle and the liquid is all over the model.
Here’s my questions.

How do I get the excess off….
If I do nothing it looks to heavy (yes.. the obvious answer is to put less on, but to little has no effect)
If I dab the excess with tissue paper while it is still wet, it absorbs the mixture and takes away the was effect.
If I wipe the excess off with a tissue paper it takes the mixture away form panel lines
If I let it dry it doesn’t do anything.

So how do I get the excess off.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, December 3, 2004 3:35 PM
I've never really liked the appearance of a cover-all wash, so instead of applying the wash to the entire vehicle and trying to remove the excess, you might try using a very small brush and applying the wash only on the panel lines, around raised detail and the like. This way you have less clean-up to mess with. You might need to use a more concentrated wash to do this. I actually use a drafting pen with a .5mm tip on the panel lines first, then blend it in with the wash over it.
  • Member since
    October 2003
  • From: Clovis, Calif
Posted by rebelreenactor on Friday, December 3, 2004 8:48 PM
I use a faily small flat brush and I apply my wash only around raised and recessed details like bolts and eginge deck covers, not the entire model. to remove the excess this is what i do:
1. Airbrush a glosscoat (I use Future Floor polish)
2.apply wash and wait for it to dry.
3. Use a Q-tip and barely dip it in the proper thinner. Be extra carfeul not to get too much or it will ruin the paint and show the bare plastic. You dont want to soak it, just a Very very very small amount.
4. scrub the areas where you dont want the wash. Sometimes you have to scrub harder than others.
5. spray the flatcoat
6. drybrush raised detail to even more fully show the wash

here is a pic of my latest model using this technique.

John
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, December 8, 2004 3:19 PM
Here is something I stumbled on by accident, If you are using waterbased paints as you wash after you seal it with clear coat you can add a touch of liquid soap to some clear water then brush or dab the water onto the spot you are working on then wait for it to settle then dab or brush on the thinned wash and it will flow along the same path the water just took . I have tried this with armor and flat coats of clear but I waited until the water had just about completely dried so that only the nooks and crannies soaked up the wash.
  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Massachusetts
Posted by ajlafleche on Thursday, December 9, 2004 1:28 PM
I'm with Peridixon. Apply the wash where you want it with a small brush. You may have ot repeat the application, but isn't that better than risking a really good paint job and decals?

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