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#1 |
GLOBAL MODDING TERRORIST
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Do you hand paint or use a quality air brush?
By quality I mean the type that can do a line the thickness of a pencil point and allow total flow control at the same time. Double action I believe it's called. I prefer Paasche myself. |
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#2 |
Ocean Warrior
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Airbrushes and apartments don't get along (unless you have a super-cool landlord).
![]() The channel I want to shade is maybe .2-.3 mm wide so I'm going to trust a good 000 brush and really thin down a clear type of paint like "black smoke" to get the effect (or a 50/50 mix of black smoke and clear varnish). For example, Tamiya panel liner would be too heavy (I already tried it), it needs to be very subtle- just enough to highlite the outline of the door. ![]() ![]() The other plan is mix maybe 1 part of Tamiya clear (turn signal) orange with 3 or 4 parts of clear gloss then really thin it down and apply it over the Lava Orange base coat. ![]() One thing about Lava Orange is that it looks like a fairly "bright" or strong shade of orange in strong light but looks more "pastel" in darker conditions. Weird but neat. ![]() |
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#3 |
Ocean Warrior
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So, I repainted the panel line of the filler door with the Lava Orange paint last night and wanted to let it set and cure for a couple of days.
Looking at it today, aside from doing some minor polishing and buffing where some "micro chips" happened while I was removing the old paint, I think I'm done. ![]() It looks like a gas filler door on the fender now. The shading idea would have been tricky (and I still might try it later) but for now I'm happy to leave it alone. I still want to create a US license plate and frame and order a 1/18th scale seat belt/harness set from a shop I found on-line (in Italy) and this project will be finished. ![]() |
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#4 | |
GLOBAL MODDING TERRORIST
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![]() Quote:
When I was in apartments I had a small box with a small fan I used to expell any fumes out the window. You can hardly hear the air compressor running and again it is tiny! a 12 pack is bigger then it. ![]() |
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
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I had one of the original Tamiya "Spraywork" air brushes back when I lived in the barracks in Sasebo and Pearl.
![]() While the airbrush really was cheap, it held up for many years and survived a move across the Pacific while painting everything from 1/144th scale bombers to 1/24th scale cars and a resin 1/128th scale Los Angeles class fast attack. ![]() The one big problem with any air brush is over spray. Even if you are religious about using a fume extractor, you're going to wind up with over spray somewhere, usually on the floor or the walls. Like I said, you need to have a super-cool landlord in that case. ![]() |
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