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I've run into a small problem painting my figures. I use small crocodile clips to hold them at one end while I paint the other end. Once painted, I spray with Humbrol Matt varnish and leave them to dry overnight. Then I wrap a small piece of kitchen roll around the painted end to protect it and put that end into a clip while I paint the other end.
I did that with the latest batch but when I came to swap ends, I noticed little white spots all over the bits I'd painted and varnished.
Am I right in thinking this is most likely due to me not shaking the rattle can enough? If so, can I just paint over the spots or do I have to strip and re-paint from scratch?
I was pleased with my attempt at a pillbox. Alas, I primed it with a cheap household emulsion using a large, cheap brush. This has left brush marks everywhere which I can't cover up (I've said it before, and I'll say it again: my brush painting leaves a lot to be desired. I could leave brush marks using just water!). I tried a coat of watered down PVA with some baking soda sifted on. The baking soda just brushed off completely when I tried to remove the excess. Maybe my PVA was too thin. I'll give it one more try and if that doesn't work, I'll make another pillbox.
No probs. Dave.....The last picture was, I'm sure you realised, just a bit of a leg pull really....but the other two could work.
Is the first picture no use? You would only have to make a sort of mound and cut a slot in it.....
Your pillbox looks fine. If you coat the thing with fairly thin pva, let it dry or at least go sticky, then mix some polyfilla and plaster the polystyrene, that won't come off, and then you can scribe some cracks, whatever, into your 'Concrete' Might be worth a try.....
Or, again using pva, try putting dry polyfilla powder in a sieve and tapping it over your pillbox.
Can't help with your paint problem 'cos I don't use spray cans.
Duh! Don't know why I've been pithering about with baking soda when I've got a BIG bag of plaster in the cupboard. A coating of that over PVA will do the trick for sure.
My idea for a layout isn't that big Ron. I just thought some cliffs and a pillbox/bunker either side of a gap with some small sand dunes protected by barbed wire:
Looks great. My son is working on a diorama for a history project. What material did you use for your hedgehogs? Any hints on making those would be appreciated.
Looks great. My son is working on a diorama for a history project. What material did you use for your hedgehogs? Any hints on making those would be appreciated.
Hi Henny. I'll see if I can do a 'how to' with some pictures.
Hi Dave, I've been watching your trials, tribulations and eventual progress from the wings. It looks to be coming along nicely now. I like the concept of featuring a protected draw. It will be a point of focus in the finished diorama.
OK. I've done a 'how to' for the hedgehogs I made. I've guessed at all the sizes and used the one I showed earlier as a pattern.
Materials used:
2mm x 2mm angle, microstrip and 0.010 Evergreen sheet. You could use just the sheet and cut and fabricate all the parts - but I'm a lazy b****r!
Cut three pieces of the angle 30mm long. Mark the centre of the length on the outside of the angle and mark 3mm in from each end on the inside.
Cut a small notch in each side at the 3mm marks you made. I used a small triangular file. Do this before you assemble the cross pieces (ask me what happens if you do it after!).
Join the flat faces of two of the cross pieces at right angles. Make sure you line up the centre marks on the inside as shown. I used superglue for speed although any glue suitable for styrene is OK.
Add the third cross piece at right angles to the other two - again make sure that the centre lines meet on the inside of the join.
Cut three pieces of the sheet into rectangles 10mm x 3mm. Mark the centre line and a line 2mm from the centre line as shown.
Cut two of the corners from this piece as shown.
Fix each piece in turn to one of the three cross beams. Line up the centre lines as shown.
Cut small squares from either the microstrip or the sheet material (I used microstrip because I managed to find a piece that was exactly the right width).
Fit these at each end of the cross piece as shown. Any excess can be easily trimmed with your knife once the glues has set.
This is getting beyond a joke. I tried Ron's suggestion last night to try and cover up the brush marks on this pillbox I'm trying to make. A good coating of PVA, allow to get tacky, cover with a layer of plaster dusted on through a sieve and leave to dry overnight. Sounds good yeah?
Brushed off the excess plaster this morning and NONE of it has stuck! None! Not so much as a single grain of it!
Somebody pleeeeeaaaase tell me why my PVA isn't working.
Hi Gern, I cant tell you why it isn't working but, most Bunkers are made out of poured concrete, and this was done with mostly wooden outside plates and after the concrete was cured they were removed.
So on most of the real bunkers you could find a wood grain on the surface, so I think when you take a brush and go over your diluted pva glue it would simulate a wood grain?
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