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Oil Paints?

pjgtech

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Hi peeps, another question for the hive mind.....
I've seen a few YT vids where the modellers use oil paints, you know the sort that craft people use in those small tubes.
They seem to use them for making streaks, etc.
What do you think, are they a useful paint to use? and do you use them?
 
Yes....a very useful technique!

Just buy the colours you want.......or buy a cheapo box and bin the spare colours.......cos a tube will last a life time!

Trick is getting the right thinners and lots of practice.....theres lots of different ways to use oils

Oh and dont forget to give them plenty of time to dry off.....i tend to leave a week to be sure
 
You can make all over washes or pin washes to get those steaks......and if you dont like it flood with thinners to flush it away and start again
 
Thread owner
Vids I've seen say thin oils with white spirit, (and obviously make sure model is varnished before apply white spirit or oil thinned with white spirits) but that smells, what else can be used to thin oils?
I have also seen vids where they say avoid cheap oils, as they can be grainy/inconsistent, they have recommended Winsor and newel oils?
 
Sansodoor!....thats the stuff!.....hobby craft used to do an odourless oil thinner but this replaced it

it can get grainy but ive always done ok......but expensive stuff aint that expensive when you think you only want a handful of colours and tubes will last longer than you will!
 
Oils are very useful and very versatile. Look at Steve Jones Scale Modelling and Mike Rinaldi on YouTube. Use artists white spirit or W&N Sansodor. Ordinary DIY white spirit is a bit too aggressive and can affect the underlying surface. I prefer good quality oil paints Abteilung 502, specially for modelling, or the best artist paints. They have finer pigments.
Oils can be used as washes and filters, they can create streaking, dust, oil stains, rust etc. The only down side is the long drying time but even this can be an advantage as you have plenty of time to adjust to get the effect you are after.
I honestly believe that virtually all the weathering effects needed can be achieved with oils and pigments - maybe occasionally also enamels.
 
Thread owner
What colours would you recommend getting first? say 1/2 a dozen essentials?
White, Black, grey, green, etc
 
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I have lamp black....burnt umber....raw umber....yellow ochre......burnt sienna.........green .......blue..... cos they all work well on a spot wash........every one will have thier own choiced
 
I have Windsor and Newton, the about10cm long tubes. had them for 20 years. used under a quarter of the ones I use most.
One of the reasons they are sooooo long to dry is.... the oil. you will have seen on the videos you have watched that they nearly all put some paint on a bit of corrugated card, at least over night. That is to let the excess oil, often linseed of rape seed which takes for ever to dry.
Seems odd removing some oil to replace with spirits of some form, but the spirit evaporates a lot quicker.
I use them most for rust streaks and panel lines.
 
Plus one on Ian’s technique of leaching out the oil before use. I find card from Amazon boxes is good. Sansodor is essential I think, and it can also be used to dilute enamels. I’ve always used Windsor and Newton Winton students range, though I do have a couple of the dearer artists range. To start with I would just buy a small starter set of six 20ml tubes and some Sansodor, plus a titanium white and a lamp black. Learn how to really use these and how to mix your own colours before buying every colour under the rainbow (though Naples yellow light is a great colour for fading German yellow). Oils are not only good for washes and streaks, they are also very useful for dry brushing because of the far smaller and more consistent pigment they use. Don’t worry about them going off either, Oil paints last forever unless you are going to paint very a large picture 😉.
While you are in the art shop, pick up some pastel chalks as well. If you have some of those, and a square of 400 grade wet or dry, you will have almost everything you need for creative weathering. Most of the weathering products aimed at modellers are just the same things as this, repackaged, increased in price, and marketed back to us. Besides, if you mix your own, not only will you learn much more and gain confidence, your model will be unique to you….
 
Thread owner
What do you think of the abteilung oils in the scale model shop, are they ok too?
EDIT, oops sorry I see that Jimr has already recommended those, cheers
 
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Thread owner
Ok, just ordered some oil paints (Abteilung 502) and sansodor, got black, white, a grey, a brown, a rust colour and a green.
I figure if using for rust, stains, streaks, etc then those should cover me, and I can darken or lighten with the black and white.
Was debating whether to also get a red, yellow and blue, but I can always add more later.
They will do for starters....
Cheers all
 
Tim has echoed my post. Oils and pigments can do all the weathering you need to master. Pastel chalks , ground up like Tim says, make pigments. The oils you have bought will last for years and years and are a good choice of colours. Echo Ian and Tim regarding put the oil paint onto card to leach out the linseed oil.
 
Thread owner
Tim has echoed my post. Oils and pigments can do all the weathering you need to master. Pastel chalks , ground up like Tim says, make pigments. The oils you have bought will last for years and years and are a good choice of colours. Echo Ian and Tim regarding put the oil paint onto card to leach out the linseed oil.

Has anyone seen/used the Ammo Mig oil pens? apparently you don't need to lay them out to get rid of excess oil, but I bet they are only small and you don't get a lot of paint in them!
 
For rust I go for Burnt sienna and Brown unbra I think. Just remember rust is rust: Comes in all colours as long as its rust. New and freshwater rust is quite orange red, if you want it lighter, use more thinner. Old rust and Sea water rust is quite a dark intense colour, more towards the red than orange. Use the same paints, just less thinners. If you want rust on a tank, remember that it will be more fresh than old and surface rust. No deep rusted through. A common mis-hap is to chuck rust on a tank like it was a hundred years old while still in service on the battlefield. Dings and scratched fine. ware and tear also, but a rusted out shell is going to be very old or totally burnt out.
I posted a few pictures of a Submarine, it on here, and a Danish one, It got praise here and slaughtered in Denmark. So you cant win either way. lol
 
Used the Windsor & Newton oils for years. Can be used for all sorts, I tended to use them for adjusting the colour of enamel paints. For instance to get a slightly lighter or darker for shading and highlights when figure painting. But also streaking and other weathering techniques.
 
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