Hellspawn wrote:Even with an intensive bath in Acetone, I had some metals minis that I couldn't get completely cleaned. The primer had been done too long ago and was melted with the metal itself and some part wouldn't go away. Sadly there isn't any real solution for that
How did they turn out once you started painting them? Was there any major issues I should watch out for? I'm gonna try the steel wool tonight and I have some fine grit sand paper for the flat areas. I'm mainly concerned with losing detail as the primer was kind of thick.
mahon wrote:whatever you do - be bold with it. being shy will result in boring miniatures.
Well, I reprimed them, and no major details got lost. Of course, you need to be careful with the primer, but beside that, nothing to really worry about considering the color is melted in the metal. Although, my old primer coat was pretty thin which I guess helped
So I pretty much said fuck it last night and took them out of the acetone. They are currently soaking in some dish soap (wanna make sure all the acetone is gone). I also started working on the bases. I know I was going to do something more involved for the bases but looking at the minis, I've gone with a simple basing scheme.
I do have another question. I'm going to be trying the hairspray weathering technique on these and I want the "weathered" (bottom) layer to be metal. Would it be better to hand paint the metal over using an airbrush? I'm worried that the metal particles will cause an issue with the airbrush as this will be my first time using an airbrush.
mahon wrote:whatever you do - be bold with it. being shy will result in boring miniatures.
First time with airbrush you might want to avoid using metal paints It's not that hard or different, but considering that it'll be your first time, better try to work with normal paints first than metal ones cause the dillution isn't really the same
I'm using a mix of demineralised water and spray to wash the windows (the poorest/cheapest one that doesn't have any perfume nor any additives). 50/50 of each
So finally got a chance to sit down and start working on these. Originally I was going to use the hairspray weathering technique on these to show some battle damage, but after trying it out on the Avalancher, I did not like the way that it looked. So I've gone back to parade ground ready. I might add some battle damage later, but I'm not sure.
And the cat in question, who is aparently hiding under the bed. He knocked the desk lamp over, which made my desk explode. Click to see full-sized image
mahon wrote:whatever you do - be bold with it. being shy will result in boring miniatures.