Hi TimGood luck with the liquid pigment. I have an aircraft set that I simply didn’t get on with Bob. I found the remover stripped the underlying paint. Probably just me though. Looking very good otherwise though.
That set is actually pretty powerful—but the instructions assume you already know “weathering” techniques. I’ll translate it into a practical, step-by-step workflow, specifically for a wooden deck on a ship model.
How to Use – Hulls & Wooden Decks Liquid Pigments
Official demo (worth watching once)
Your Lifecolor set contains liquid pigments, not normal paint. Think of them like:
What you actually bought (in plain terms)
Typical colors in your set:
- very thin washes / filters
- adjustable stains you can remove or blend
They’re designed to be manipulated after application, not just painted on. (Chronos Engineering Tools)
- Wooden Deck Darkener / Shadower → for wood tone variation
- Dried Salt → streaks & weathering
- Surface Shadower → panel lines & depth
- Fouling Green → algae/grime (mostly hull)
- Remover → this is key (lets you erase/blend everything)
HOW TO USE IT (simple workflow for a wooden deck)
1. Prep (this is where most people mess up)
- Seal your deck with a clear satin or gloss coat
- This is important → pigments flow better and don’t stain instantly
- Let it dry fully
If you skip this, the pigment will soak into wood and you lose control.
2. Apply the pigment (light and messy on purpose)
Use a fine brush:
Don’t try to be neat.
- Dip into Wooden Deck Darkener or Shadower
- Apply lightly:
- along plank lines
- random planks (not all!)
- around details
You can:
- use it straight
- or slightly diluted with water (Chronos Engineering Tools)
3. Blend / remove (this is the real technique)
Now take:
Then:
- a clean brush slightly damp with water or Remover
This creates:
- soften the lines
- wipe away excess
- drag pigment along planks
- subtle shadows
- natural wood variation
Key idea:
You’re not painting—you’re editing the pigment after applying it.
4. Add variation (don’t overdo it)
Repeat with:
You can layer effects, but:
- darker tone → for deeper planks
- lighter/dried salt → for faded areas
- pigments will mix if applied on top of each other (Chronos Engineering Tools)
5. Lock it in
When happy:
Otherwise:
- spray a clear coat (satin or matte)
- everything stays removable
Techniques that work especially well
âś” Plank variation (most realistic look)
- randomly darken individual planks
- blend edges softly
âś” Panel line shading
- run pigment into plank seams
- clean excess → leaves subtle lines
âś” Filters (advanced but easy)
- apply a very thin coat over whole deck
- wipe most of it off
→ creates a unified tone
Common mistakes (avoid these)
Applying on raw wood → stains instantly, no control
Using too much pigment → looks dirty instead of realistic
Not using the remover → that’s half the system
Trying to “paint cleanly” → this isn’t normal paint
Think of the process like this:
Mental model (this helps a lot)
That’s why Lifecolor says it behaves a bit like oils—you can push it around after applying. (Chronos Engineering Tools)Apply messy → then sculpt it with removal
Quick beginner recipe (follow this exactly once)
That alone already looks realistic.
- Satin clear coat on deck
- Apply Wooden Deck Shadower along plank lines
- Wait ~1–2 minutes
- Blend with damp brush
- Randomly darken a few planks
- Seal with clear coat
If you want, tell me:
I can give you a tailored technique (the approach changes quite a bit depending on that).
- what ship scale you’re working on
- whether your deck is real wood veneer or plastic
Instructions, my 'part i sit on' the YouTube site just shows it being slapped on!Bob, I asked the AI how to use the set, this is what it replied, perhaps it can help you out? Goodluck
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