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Alan, in that a wash is thinned paint, a filter is tinted thinner. Take a quantity of thinner & add a brush with your desired filter colour, stir the thinner so the brush is clean & there's your filter!If I was doing late German armour in a 3 colour scheme, I'd add a brown filter over the matt paint. This 'ties' the 3 colours together.
It's vital to apply a filter onto matt paint, otherwise it'll run off the surface.
There's a good article explaining it better than I can here
http://www.missing-lynx.com/rare_world/rw02.htm
Thanks mate but I'm still confused , I now know what a filter does but I still don't know what a filter is , do you make yourself , can you buy it , is there a company that makes them and what do I look for ?
Sorry to sound like a complete dullard but dyslexia can be a pain in the Harris when reading lol
Explaining what is does is harder than explaining what it is! Some people 'see' filters & some don't. I guess it's like audio equipment where some are fine with a one-box system & other's want separates. Anyway I'm rambling ...!
What a filter does is lay down a very slight tint over the paint. Light catches it as it passes through & as the light is reflected back off the paint, the filter subtly changes how the paint looks.
If you had a 3 colour camo of dark yellow, olive green & red-brown, you'd usually apply a brown filter. The effect would be to soften the tone of the colours, so that you lose the stark look of them & they appear to be closer in hue than they were previously.
The main problem with filters is that they rarely show up to anything other than the naked eye, unless you have high-end photographic equipment.
Mig make ready-made filters & as do his new company Ammo.
I hope this helps? Probably confused everyone even more! :P
Filters basically modify colours, pretty much in the same way as photographic filters do. Varying thier intensity can also produce very useful shading effects but it is basically about modifying the base colour. Usually it is to tone down the strength of a pigment and the effects of scale should be taken into account when using them.
It's looking good, very good indeed.... I remember this kit from when it was first released, I loved it and certainly do not remember the fit issues you have found but, I expect, such issues were very much the norm back then and models have moved on a lot..... But you are doing a superb job.
I take off the mask tape and clean a bite the upper side. I’m really glad with the final result, as you can see, there isn’t a step between the painted and not painted part, inclusive with all the coats applied :P
[ATTACH]86623.IPB[/ATTACH]
I was working with the mask and forget this black paint drop (argghhhh,what a hell)....was too late for taking it off, will need to add a fine touch of Hellblau again
[ATTACH]86624.IPB[/ATTACH]
For a more detailed model, I have decided to do a “pin wash” on all the little holes of the rear part (one by one ) Now I have to clean with a brush and White Spirit.
[ATTACH]86625.IPB[/ATTACH]
Over the decals I applied an acrylic black wash, I was looking for cover those little white points.... now I have to add some dirt again.
[ATTACH]86628.IPB[/ATTACH]
Well, and this is the final result. I will be waiting for the oil and smoke streaks until the entire model has been painted.
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