Salt technique questions
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- sci-fi-bldr
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Salt technique questions
Going to give the salt technique a try on some up coming projects....
Any good tips.........
Namely......how to stick it........I've heard of water...if so....how long does it need to dry...............also heard of hairspray.....any kind work??....
Does different types of salt work different.......what type of paints work better with this technique....
Is there a clear coat step anywhere in the operation?
Any negatives??................
Any good tips.........
Namely......how to stick it........I've heard of water...if so....how long does it need to dry...............also heard of hairspray.....any kind work??....
Does different types of salt work different.......what type of paints work better with this technique....
Is there a clear coat step anywhere in the operation?
Any negatives??................
Water works fine. Brush a little on the area you want to apply the salt and sprinkle some salt on. It'll dry within a few minutes unless you get really heavy. I've found that waiting a half an hour or so before painting works fine. I've even a/b as soon as I was done applying the salt, some was dry other not so much.
Salt & hairspray combines two techniques into a single exciting method. The hairspray is applied then warm water is used to moisten it a bit and the salt applied. The advantage is once you have your color on you can scrub areas away with more warm water to roughen the paint even more.
Salt & hairspray combines two techniques into a single exciting method. The hairspray is applied then warm water is used to moisten it a bit and the salt applied. The advantage is once you have your color on you can scrub areas away with more warm water to roughen the paint even more.
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- Lt. Z0mBe
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One thing I do is to add just a drop of laundry soap to an airbrush jar of water. This allows the water to have just a bit less surface tension. Again, just one drop is all you need. Too much, and the water will be running into the nooks and crannies. The reason I do this is to allow me to "paint" just a little line of water along a panel line if I want to.
Also, something I learned from others here and FSM is restaurant salt packets and bulk salt packages from the grocery store are two different grain sizes. This comes in really handy when you want to layer your weathering between, for example with a World War II aircraft, to show exposed primer (larger grain, perhaps) and then little patches of exposed metal peeking through (smaller grains laid first over the metallic color). One guy over on aircraftresourcecenter.com bought a mortar and pestle with which to grind salt to even finer grades for small scale stuff. I could see where that would work wonders for 1/72 and below aircraft and armor.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
Also, something I learned from others here and FSM is restaurant salt packets and bulk salt packages from the grocery store are two different grain sizes. This comes in really handy when you want to layer your weathering between, for example with a World War II aircraft, to show exposed primer (larger grain, perhaps) and then little patches of exposed metal peeking through (smaller grains laid first over the metallic color). One guy over on aircraftresourcecenter.com bought a mortar and pestle with which to grind salt to even finer grades for small scale stuff. I could see where that would work wonders for 1/72 and below aircraft and armor.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
- sci-fi-bldr
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- sci-fi-bldr
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- Romulan Spy
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- TER-OR
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Kosher salt, pretzel salt, popcorn salt - but be careful of the fine stuff, it can get everywhere - which may look like rust bubbling beneath paint.
I do what Kenny indicated, and I use a paint brush to move it around on the model. Allow to dry overnight, then paint. The coat of paint will fix the salt, but you will need to be careful, it's easy to knock off.
When it's time to remove, I like a soft toothbrush. Then make sure you wipe the area down with a wet chamois or paper towel to remove excess paint flakes and salt.
I'll point you to my Japanese "Nell" model, probably my best pictures of the salt technique.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ter-or/set ... 704701438/
I do what Kenny indicated, and I use a paint brush to move it around on the model. Allow to dry overnight, then paint. The coat of paint will fix the salt, but you will need to be careful, it's easy to knock off.
When it's time to remove, I like a soft toothbrush. Then make sure you wipe the area down with a wet chamois or paper towel to remove excess paint flakes and salt.
I'll point you to my Japanese "Nell" model, probably my best pictures of the salt technique.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ter-or/set ... 704701438/
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Terry Miesle
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Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
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Salt residue is a problem. Future would be a problem, too, and you may need to buff the area down. The best I've seen is with water, but getting the mix right isn't easy. And you willl need to clean up residue before airbrushing. I like those foam makeup application brushes for that.
Raised by wolves, tamed by nuns, padded for your protection.
Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moratati
Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
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- Jonas Calhoun
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The surfactant will help stop the water from beading up. Handy stuff to have around.Jonas Calhoun wrote:One of the problems I had applying the water was that it'd bead into nice unnatural round drops.
Should I add a surfactant? I also had a water softener installed since I tried, maybe that will help...
Dan
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