Small scale figure Step by step (SBS). A 1/48 freebie Paul Hicks sculpt is the victim.
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Hi Rick. 1/87 is getting a bit small for eyes. At that scale I’d probably just leave the eye sockets in shadow unless the figure had dark skin colouration.Comment
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Probably time for a bit about painting equipment as well…….this is the kit I currently use.
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Wet palette…….this is the larger one from Redgrass games. The black colouration comes from the time of RA flares and group builds…..I didn’t use it for a while and being damp and closed, the sponge and paper developed a bad case of pin mould! The paper was discarded, and the sponge and container have been dilute beach washed and rinsed. They no no longer have the problem, but the staining remains….
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Water pots. The small ones are used to rinse brushes and dilute paint, the large one is mostly for the cat to drink out of when she gets thirsty….I regularly change the small ones when painting, and leave the large one with fresh water at the end of every session…..
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Here’s the large one in use…..
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Other tools…..dry palette for washes etc. Tweezers to remove stray hairs from the paint job, which always seems to happen….and brush cleaner. This is the most important thing you can buy in my opinion. Many years of trying other things, such as washing up liquid and bar soap have convinced my of this. I get much more life out of my brushes after moving to this stuff.
Next interminable episode will be about brushes…..
Cheers all
Tim
I use Vallejo model colours and always thin them with water. Do you thin them when using a wet palette.
MikeComment
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I do, yes. That’s what the mixing brush is for. I just add a drop or two of water to the paint using the brush and mix it in until the mix is what you want. The wet palette keeps the paint at the working consistency for days. For very small amounts of paint the palette can supply the water if you just press lightly on it.Comment
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I do, yes. That’s what the mixing brush is for. I just add a drop or two of water to the paint using the brush and mix it in until the mix is what you want. The wet palette keeps the paint at the working consistency for days. For very small amounts of paint the palette can supply the water if you just press lightly on it.
The day after a painting session the paints on my palette will be too thin and often separated, too.
So I've taken to using really tiny amounts of paint each session, and renewing the palette colours for each subsequent session. (I can often wipe the palette clean to restart, which extends the life of each sheet.)Comment
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Tim, I find that most of my (Vallejo) paints overdilute themselves, drawing water from the wet palette, in just a few hours - sometimes even quicker than that. It may be because of the palette I use (Dspiae), the level of the water I keep in it, the evaporation rate I'm getting (I keep the lid ajar) - what do you think?
The day after a painting session the paints on my palette will be too thin and often separated, too.
So I've taken to using really tiny amounts of paint each session, and renewing the palette colours for each subsequent session. (I can often wipe the palette clean to restart, which extends the life of each sheet.)
Happens to me sometimes Paul, but more with some colours than others. Reds are awful for it, black is very good, staying at the right consistency for a long time. Diluted paint is less affected by this problem as well.
I don’t keep my wet palette that “wet” , if that makes sense, so that might reduce the problem. The redgrass games paper controls water permeability better than the Daley Rowney stuff I used before as well, so that may minimise the problem.
If I want to use a colour that this has happened to, by the way, I just wick off the excess water from the top using a scrap of kitchen towel and add a drop of matt medium to remix the paint.Comment
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