I have been thinking of painting figures for a while. I have seen some miniart ones I quite like the look of and they don't seem a bad price. I don't think I will go to any particular period. The area I would like advice is about the paints. Is there such thing as a starter kit? I know the basics as about 25 years ago when I was recovering from a bike accident I passed the time painting citidel figures. Any help, gr
A little advice please
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Hi Paul... it all depends on how detailed you want to be and if you don't mind mixing...For example you will need flesh colours and I seem to have built up a collection of different shades of flesh colours over a period of time which makes things a lot easier...otherwise its a bottle of basic flesh colour which you can lighten or darken to get shades. I seem to recall that I got a bit fed upon doing that and bought a pack of flesh coloured paints ...about 5 bottles I think which is good for me as I mainly do busts... If you were doing a smaller scale you wouldn't need quite so many.
I often find that I make a start on something and then find I haven't got a particular colour so its either a case of mixing one or a quick look on eBay and a couple of days wait for it to arrive... That way your paint collection will grow without you actually realising it!
Thanks
Jason.Comment
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Humbrol do a figure basic set for figures https://www.humbrol.com/uk-en/acryli...nting-set.html
Most other uniform sets are pretty specific https://www.scalemodelshop.co.uk/?s=uniform+set
I think you'd be better off by getting a particular model, and seeing what you really need, rather than buying complete sets, and only using one or two colours.
DaveComment
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Guest
Paul, don't start with Miniart! They are poor kits and take a lot of work to get into a decent enough state to paint, and even then you'll only get a half decent figure. My advice would be to have a look at the Tamiya figures (Rommel, German Machine Gunner and German Tank Commander are good) or the Dragon ones - John stocks a good range here at Scale Model shop.
I think Dave is right, in that it's best to buy the paint you actually need. The sets will include colours that you'll never open, so it's more cost-effective to wait and see what the figure requires. Over time you'll build up a set of colours that will actually be of use.Comment
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Hi Paul
I would concur with the others, just buy the paint you need to start with. Just out of interest, what model paint do you use at the moment, it should be transferable to this discipline unless you use Tamiya exclusively. Lastly, just push paint around and have fun.....and ask questions if you get stuck.Comment
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Paul,
I skipped over the 'MiniArt' figure in your post - I would follow along with Mr Day's advice, steer clear! I have attempted 4 MiniArt figure models - and finished one! ( Athenian Hoplite }. They're old models, the fit is um........... not good & instructions poor.
What scale are you thinking of, 1/16, 1/24, 1/35?
DaveComment
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Hi Paul,
Whatever acrylic paint you use I can recommend using a wet palette which keeps the paint usable for longer. I got back into figure painting eighteen months ago, after a lifetime of Humbrol enamels and I found the quick drying time of acrylics incredibly frustrating; my painting experience was mostly pain.
Now I almost ENJOY the painting......
I would also echo the advice of the others and say only buy the paints you need for each job rather than sets- I have quite a few that I will probably never use .
I would also recommend not being too cheap in your choice of figures. I thought I would use some 1/32 soft plastic figures for practice but the mouldings were so poor I got completely disillusioned. I think if you are inspired by the subject it will be a much more positive experience.
And if it goes badly, there's always Dettol, which means you can start again
Good luck and I can't wait to see the resultsComment
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Second the wet pallet advice. The other advantage is that your mixes will still be available if you need to touch in later on. Last bit I missed is good brush soap. The Masters is the bees knees to me. It will extend the life of your brushes exponentially. Once you are used to using it buy some good brushes, but at the outset only but cheaper ones because you will destroy your initial ones in all probability (Everyone does to start with). If you are looking for inspiration and advice Vince Ventruella’s YouTub channel has some very good videos, even if his voice is a little soporific....Comment
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Paul,
I skipped over the 'MiniArt' figure in your post - I would follow along with Mr Day's advice, steer clear! I have attempted 4 MiniArt figure models - and finished one! ( Athenian Hoplite }. They're old models, the fit is um........... not good & instructions poor.
What scale are you thinking of, 1/16, 1/24, 1/35?
DaveComment
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Thanks Dave. Do these kits come with colour list, instructions and guide or is it a suss out yourself?Comment
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