If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
That is exactly what I was thinking, yes. There must be some way to dip-paint these things without paint clogging up everything and obliterating the detail.
Can’t see that myself Jakko. Dip painting always leaves a thick coating behind. Painting with inks might be a better shot? They flow really well and leave a very thin coating.
That might well be the way of doing it - I've never worked with inks so can't go by experience, could you build up the depth of colour with them - give a few coats, rather than a single? Guessing that the thinner the medium the better to get into the nooks & crannies.
Dip painting always leaves a thick coating behind.
Exactly, not a problem for (say) 1:1 car bodies, but definitely an issue for almost any scale of model.
Originally posted by Tim Marlow
Painting with inks might be a better shot? They flow really well and leave a very thin coating.
But are also very translucent, so you would get a strongly shaded track with a lot of the bare plastic still visible through the colour. I’m thinking that maybe well-thinned paint, in a couple of dips, might work? Maybe I should just assemble some spare track and see if I can find a way
Originally posted by GerryW
That might well be the way of doing it - I've never worked with inks so can't go by experience, could you build up the depth of colour with them - give a few coats, rather than a single?
You could, but inks have a very strong colour, much more so than highly thinned paint that flows like ink, for example.
The tracks are now fully painted and weathered. After the dark brown base, I applied an overall wash made of Humbrol dark earth enamel mixed with some raw umber oil paint to darken it, because I had done some research and found that the soil in central Honshu is brown, but with a fair amount of volcanic ash mixed in that probably makes it darker than brown soil in Europe.
Once the wash had dried, I drybrushed the chevrons on the outside, as well as the insides of the end connectors and both sides of the central guide teeth with Humbrol polished steel. After that I painted the inner face of the track, between the guide teeth and the end connectors, with Italeri rubber colour (dark grey) that I then gave a black wash.
[ATTACH]418653[/ATTACH]
The tank itself was also washed with the same shade as the tracks, thicker on the hull front and lower sides than on the upper sides, top, etc. Once that had dried I applied darker washes of raw umber only to various areas, both into and around details as well as to replicate more mud and dirt. After that dried too, I drybrushed some parts with Revell yellow olive, to bring back the base colour where dirt may have been rubbed off the tank again by the crew.
Jakko, was it the 'Metalcote' polished steel, or the 'normal'? I've both, but tend to use the metalcote more often, and get to work with a cotton bud, and give it a vigorous polish - actually looks quite good.
The Metalcote, which I buffed with a soft toothbrush. You can’t see it in the photo too well, but it shines fairly well. I didn’t buff it to a mirror shine, though, as that looks unrealistic on tracks, IMHO.
The Metalcote, which I buffed with a soft toothbrush. You can’t see it in the photo too well, but it shines fairly well. I didn’t buff it to a mirror shine, though, as that looks unrealistic on tracks, IMHO.
Must admit that I tend to use it where paint would have rubbed off through constant wear, so tend to want 'bright' steel (most recent were the top corners of the frame for the Krupps tarp/load cover & the steps into the cab)
I think that’s the best use for it, yes. However, I also think too brightly-polished it may look bad because it can overpower the model if you overdo it. With the fairly large areas of “bare” steel on these tracks I deliberately kept the polishing fairly light. It also doesn’t show up as well in the photos as it does on the real thing, though.
Comment