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I really like the Tamiya paint stirrer. One of my favorite modelling tools. Also great for spooning small amounts of paint into the airbrush and the small end fits well in the paint cup to stir the paint/thinner mixture.
The Mighty Mo says no.
Cadet Chuck I pick up a handful of the plastic coffee stirrer sticks at McDonald's whenever I can stand to go there. Use 'em once and throw 'em away, and the price is right!
I pick up a handful of the plastic coffee stirrer sticks at McDonald's whenever I can stand to go there. Use 'em once and throw 'em away, and the price is right!
The old McDonalds "spoon" shaped stirring sticks were the best for that task and made great aircraft gun "blisters" .
That is, until it was revealed on the news that they were being used for drugs and McDonalds changed the design.
Nowadays I'm back to using a spare Testors paint brush plastic handle.
I just use old pieces of sprue that're lying around
Grumman Iron Works Fan.
"Don't sweat the small stuff. And.... it's ALL small stuff, until you hear INCOMING!!!!!!"
after mixing I can lift the head of the mixer just above the surface of the paint in the jar, turn it on for a second, and have almost all the paint from the mixer returned to the bottle by centrifugal force.
I'm going to have to try this, carefully. I can see potential disaster.
After years of stirring, I now also use the (micro mark) paint mixer exclusively. It mixes paint much more thoroughly than stirring with sticks--- and in a tenth the time. It also saves paint--- after mixing I can lift the head of the mixer just above the surface of the paint in the jar, turn it on for a second, and have almost all the paint from the mixer returned to the bottle by centrifugal force. I'm pretty sure I've saved the $10 cost of the mixer in paint alone--- not to mention all the time I don't waste anymore stirring.
Tom
I use the Badger for jars, and I use a paint shaker for Vallejo paints. Both work great.
13151015
I have a badger paint mixer too. If I'm stirring paint after it's been sitting, I use the mixer. If I'm just re-mixing during a session, I use a toothpick.
Badger makes a battery powered paint mixer, which I have and use regularly, which is absolutely great for mixing paint that has sat for a while on the shelf. Mixes the stuff up thoroughly and I've found that once I use the Badger mixer on a bottle or tin of paint, unless I let is sit for weeks between uses, all I have to do is give it a good shake since the Badger has already thoroughly mixed it up.
Hope this helps. The thing really is worth the money and can be had at Micro-Mark.
Bob
Just launched: Revell 1/249 U.S.S. Buckley w/ after market PE and guns.
Building: Italieri 1/35 P.T. 596 w/ Lion Roar PE.
I buy the coffee stirring sticks at the grocery store. They are about a buck for a hundred. I don't drink enough coffee at fast foods to keep enough in stock, though I do add those to my stock. But I go through them fast enough I want to have a good supply in hand. I prefer the hollow tube ones, which can pick up a little paint for mixing a bit of one color with another, with the old "finger over the top" trick. Also use that trick for applying decal setting solution using those stirring sticks.
The sticks I am talking about are hollow tubes about 3/32 inch in diameter and about four or five inches long.
Don Stauffer in Minnesota
I just use the other end of the paint brush and wipe it off,nothing extra to buy.
I use a long nail for glass jars and wooden toothpicks for metal tins (like Humbrol paints).
The nail is great, easy to clean and gets into the small groove that most bottles seem to have at the bottom.
Chris
I like the thin wooden ones from certain coffee shops. If and when I see them I grab a couple. They scrape the bottom of the bottle and mix the paint very well.
Too many models to build, not enough time in a lifetime!!
Gimme a pigfoot, and a bottle of beer...
Hi Guy's and Gal's.
Not new to the hobby but just recently started again. When it came to mixing paint that has set for awhile, I went to the Dollar store and bought a couple packages of pick up sticks to mix my paint with. They are long enough to get to the bottom of the jar and not get paint on your fingers. You can also use the same stick again and again. I bought also the small sticky strips similar to the stick notes but smaller and marked each stick with the color I used it in. Works great!!
Martin
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