Teenage Modeler
stikpusher
A few questions:
1, did you stir the paint thoroughly to mix it, or just shake the bottle a bit?
2, what did you use to thin the XF-1 for airbrushing?
3, how heavy were your three coats that you airbrushed on?
Each one on its own can cause the paint to not dry flat if done improperly.
I'd say that I mixed it thoroughly, but that was an hour before I sprayed the paint. I guess should've mixed it more before painting. I used a toothpick and really tried to scrape the bottom of the paint to make sure everything is mixed (but that was an hour ago).
As for thinning, the paint was already thin enough for airbrushing, so I didn't really add thinner.
As for the coats, I felt that they were a bit too splotchy, which could mean that the paint was a bit thick. For good measure, I did add a little thinner, and I guess I applied a thick coat. Too thick, that when I checked this morning, it was still tacky (I left fingerprints on the pant). I guess I was trying to compensate the too thick paint.
In an hours time, the paint can begin to separate again, and as others have pointed out, a toothpick does not have adequate surface area to properly mix the paint between its carrier and pigments. This will cause a glossy finish with flat paints as the flattening agent is not properly distributed throughout the paint. So there is problem #1
If it took more than 10-20 minutes for it to be dry to the touch, the coat is too heavy. Tamiya paint only drys over an extended time period when it is applied too heavily. That will also cause the glossy or shiny finish with flat paints. There is problem #2.
Not using a thinner is a red flag. In the nearly 40 years that I've been using Tamiya paints, I've never come across any ready to airbrush straight from the jar. When they are properly mixed, they have a viscosity similar to a light motor oil. They thin well with their own brand thinners (naturally), as well as Gunze's Mr Levelling Thinner (excellent stuff), Isopropyl Alcohol, or hardware store lacquer thinner (which speeds up drying time, makes flat painted even flatter, and does have serious odor if you're sensitive to such things). I've had good results with all of those thinners.
For stirring l like to use the Tamiya Stir Stick which have a screwdriver type blade at one end for stirring, and a little spoon at the other for transferring paint out of the jar in precise amounts.