9 Toe Tanker wrote: |
Great Job on the Hetzer and tutorial Doog! A couple of questions however concerning the weathering... 1) I've never really used oils in weathering due to my days as an art student and recall them drying glossy....how do you get around this? ... dull coat? 2) I've always used Tamiya paints and sometimes flat base with others diluted with denatured alcohol for airbrushing...am I using the wrong thinning agent? (the denatured alcohol). I ask this because if I put other colors on for weathering (oils included) and use denatured alcohol or mineral spirits to blend in to the model...it seems that I would be risking the original paint job ( i.e. rubbing it off the surface or exposing the plastic below) 3) I've never really used pastels either...can you explain this please? 4) Sorry for all the questions but I've been out of modeling for quite many years and am finaly getting back into it again after a long absence. Thanks kindly. TJ. |
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Hey 9, thanks for the compliment; glad you enjoyed the tutorial!
Oils do dry a bit gloossy but if you seal them with a LIGHT coat of dullcoat, you'll be able to tone the gloss down. They might've dried a LOT MORE glossy though if you were using Linseed oil for the medium.
I ALWAYS use Tamiya thinner for thinning Tamiya paints. It costs a bit, but it I've never had a problem using it. It may interest you to know that I NEVER seal my Tamiya acrylic finish before I wash with oils; if you let it dry about two hours-even less in the right conditions (low humidity) you can wash with mineral spirits after about an hour. If you wash over a dark green or panzer gray finish, use a hair dryer to help speed the drying of the wash, so it isn't even tempted to attack the finish.
I either just dust on the pastels witha big soft brush, or, for rust or thicker dirt, I use mineral spirits on a brush and dip it into the pastels and swab 'em on. You can also add clean spirits to the part thatyou want to affect, and then drop the pastel onto the wetted part from a brush; get it on the brush, hold it over the piece and tap the end of the brush and hold the brush close, tapping the powder onto the part. Some people seal it with dullcoat, but I've found that the thinner can adequately hold it in place, as long as you're not handling the model a lot.
You can also use flat acrylic coat/paint to stick the powders/pastels. Just put a bit in a mixing cup, dilute it about 50% with water, and add/scrape powders/pastels into the mix until it becomes like a thin mud. Then add with an old brush. This will give you a somewhat thicker application. The key is; EXPERIMENT!
Mike, I've heard of, and used that method you described. It works well! I'd be careful on a 1:72 kit though, I think I'd apply it dry with a brush first and seee how it looks and then seal it with dullcoat. It will look more "in scale" than droppped piles/clumps of dirt, rust etc on a small model.
ROO--SORRY! I hope you didn't ruin the model! It just completely slipped my mind when I was writing the tutorial, probably cuz I never use it, so I didn't even consider it! Hope you saved it! That was a fine Panther!