So, about a week after I joined this forum and posted my failed efforts of making anything good out of the HMS Victory Airfix Starter Set, and a few people decide to join in my madness and comment on how god awful the set is, Airfix posted this to their YouTube channel (yeah, I know, Airfix have a YouTube channel!)
So after ten minutes of watching, I put down the one I was in the middle of airbrushing and decided to pick up a new box and see if I (still a newbie) could make anything decent out of it with just the paints and brush that's in the kit (admittedly I did use steel paint from another kit, masking tape, modelling sanding files and the Revell glue with the in-built pointy bit rather than ripping up the box):
OK, fair enough, that's way better than my first two attempts with the HMS Victory starter kit and the paints it came with!
In the video it talks about having a streaky base coat made up of those acrylic paints, but for further applications to be watered down with tap water. It's not great (especially compared to the airbrush), but that trick gave me way more success than anything with these paints on the Victory.
This leads me to a couple of problems. I have now spent a fortune on various enamel paints and thinners. I have three models on the go at the moment, because enamel paints take SSOOOO long to dry that I carry on with another build. Whereas this model was done in one evening because the paint dries so quickly.
The massive thing for me is that I live in a tiny house which means the only ventilation is by having the back door open. Fine in this September heat wave, but in a few weeks time I'll be freezing my ass off or die of thinning poisoning.
So now, I find myself very tempted to make the switch to Acrylics and dump the fortune I've spent on Enamels...
DAMN YOU AIRFIX!
So after ten minutes of watching, I put down the one I was in the middle of airbrushing and decided to pick up a new box and see if I (still a newbie) could make anything decent out of it with just the paints and brush that's in the kit (admittedly I did use steel paint from another kit, masking tape, modelling sanding files and the Revell glue with the in-built pointy bit rather than ripping up the box):
OK, fair enough, that's way better than my first two attempts with the HMS Victory starter kit and the paints it came with!
In the video it talks about having a streaky base coat made up of those acrylic paints, but for further applications to be watered down with tap water. It's not great (especially compared to the airbrush), but that trick gave me way more success than anything with these paints on the Victory.
This leads me to a couple of problems. I have now spent a fortune on various enamel paints and thinners. I have three models on the go at the moment, because enamel paints take SSOOOO long to dry that I carry on with another build. Whereas this model was done in one evening because the paint dries so quickly.
The massive thing for me is that I live in a tiny house which means the only ventilation is by having the back door open. Fine in this September heat wave, but in a few weeks time I'll be freezing my ass off or die of thinning poisoning.
So now, I find myself very tempted to make the switch to Acrylics and dump the fortune I've spent on Enamels...
DAMN YOU AIRFIX!
Comment