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Help with Airbrushing

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4 replies
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  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 6:42 PM

Find a scrap model or scrap piece of styrene.  Put your mask down on the surface and back off a little from the distance with your brush, about 1.5 to 2 inches.  Spray at about 45 to 60 degrees away from the hard edge and make sure you take into account overspray on the opposite side.  The paint demarcation line will be a little hard edged but it should look pretty good.  Let us know how this works for you.

 

E

  • Member since
    February 2007
  • From: USA
Posted by Adriaran on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 2:55 PM
I'm using a Badger 360, from an airbrush can. Still don't got the money for a compressor at the mo. I'm not sure how I can lower the airpressure if I'm using a can, but I kind of figured that was my problem. I use 3x5 index cards for a mask. I suppose that's thick enough, but I suppose I need something better to lift it from the surface of the model that won't flatten when my airbrush blows on it.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 9:55 AM

Can you lower the power of your airsource?  You'll want a much lower pressure for detail work, I think in this case.  This is your main problem.  Lick this and I think your masking issue will lessen greatly.

You could try making your mask out of a sturdier material (I use Reply By Mail cards from FSM!) and raise it up off the surface by putting some layer bits of card underneath.

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, April 17, 2007 6:45 PM

What kind of airbrush are you using and what is your air source?

 

E

  • Member since
    February 2007
  • From: USA
Help with Airbrushing
Posted by Adriaran on Monday, April 16, 2007 9:37 PM

I kinda found out on short notice, but I had a 1/48 scale JU-87 Stuka that I'm trying to build for a show on Friday. I'm just healing up from chicken pox so I have a few more days out of school, by luck giving me more time to work on the model. But I want to do a good job on it, and I need help on how to do well on airbrushing techniques. How do you get continuous patterns that blend into different colors? As in, the model calls for one of the colors to have a square pattern all across it, but I want it to blend as it turns to the other color. I'm probably not making much sense.

Well, how about this. I have a lot of trouble airbrushing camoflaugh designs where the colors blend into each other, without a line separating the two colors. You have to use a mask that's lifted off the surface I know, but I need ideas for how to lift it up, how high it should be, and how to get the shapes I want for it. One problem I have is that my airbrush seems to blow very hard, and pushes the mask against the model, so the fading effect is lost. I have successfully caused the fading of one wing on a previous model, but I think it was by chance and it doesn't look great. How would I get it to look better?

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