A downside to gentrification, only the well-off can afford to live there as the renters get priced out. PaulE
'A retirement home for Lucky XI'... Revell Tug Boat.
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Thanks for the positive input boys....... :thumb2:
Small update.
I've made a start on the water.
I used some clear silicone to add some movement to the relevant surfaces before I paint the inlet waters.
....Watch out! The tide is coming in. Here I've used my usual cheap acrylics and started to blend in the various colours from mud through to sea green as the tide flows in. Then a few beads of silicone for the advancing wavelets.
Once the silicone has dried, I'll try and paint the water all proper like.
Cheers.
RonComment
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Thanks Jim. I'm glad you like it thus far.
Regarding the paint, it's fine applied neat.
I have read that it rubs off. It probably does, but who is going to try and rub paint off a model once it's applied?! Seems a bit of a daft thing for someone to write really.
Thanks again.
RonComment
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All I can smell is the silicone lol
I work with some pretty nasty chemicals daily which don't seem to bother me in the slightest, but open a tube of silicone or a tin of household gloss paint 100 yards away and my stomach starts turning!Comment
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Thanks chaps.
Big change (As usual!)
I wasn't totally happy with the incoming tide wavelets, figuring the water would still be a bit muddy so....
I brushed some brown paint onto the whole surface (silicone incl.) to try and tone down the blue and green and look what happened! By sheer accident I've produced exactly the effect I was after - A sort of foamy surge as the water races over the shallow mud. I think my late dad was looking over my shoulder.......:thumb2:
Any blue sky will hopefully still be reflected in the finished surface.
I hope you approve of the Mk. II tide surge.
Cheers.
RonComment
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