When to paint?
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When to paint?
Last model I made I painted most of it then assembled but that didn't go so well. I'm wondering if it might be better to assemble all then paint or assemble some sections and paint them for a final assembly. Tips?
- Lt. Z0mBe
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The answer to this question is always "it depends."
If the joints betqween the subassemblies are in the same place they would be on the "real" craft, and make for in-scale panel lines, then painting in subassemblies is great. Gundam and other Mecha builders do this a lot with, say arms or legs. Another example might be the wings on certain aircraft models.
On the gripping claw, if your sub assemblies are, say the right and left halves of an Enterprise saucer section - obviously where none is on the real one - then that is a bad idea, as you would want to fill the seam first before painting.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
If the joints betqween the subassemblies are in the same place they would be on the "real" craft, and make for in-scale panel lines, then painting in subassemblies is great. Gundam and other Mecha builders do this a lot with, say arms or legs. Another example might be the wings on certain aircraft models.
On the gripping claw, if your sub assemblies are, say the right and left halves of an Enterprise saucer section - obviously where none is on the real one - then that is a bad idea, as you would want to fill the seam first before painting.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
- Mr. Badwrench
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- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 6:31 pm
- Location: Wheatridge, Co.
ZOmBe is correct. You have to do a little of both. Look at each step of the assembly with an eye towards painting. Will it be easier or harder to build with this part painted? Interior parts, like cockpits and engines, are almost always easier to paint before installation. Sometimes it is easier to paint a control panel or seat or figure before installing it in the cockpit. bombs, missiles, and ray guns are easier to paint before hanging them under the wings or repulsor lifts. But it's a heck of a lot easier to paint a fuselage once the wings and nose and stuff are on, puttied, and fared in. Watch for trouble spots. It may be easier to paint an engine greeblie before the cover goes on over it, but much easier to paint the cover once it's installed. Then you have a complicated masking problem to solve. The trick is to minimize these little problem areas as much as possible. The only way to get good at that is to build a lot of models.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
Yeah agreed thats with just about anything. Gonna do a P-50 before I hit up the viper should knock the rust off. But I see what your saying just always thinking about the final painting. Ive been experimenting with different tapes. Ive found the scotts painter blue tape to work best so far. Any other suggestions?
- Lt. Z0mBe
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- Joined: Thu May 29, 2003 1:46 pm
- Location: Balltown Kentucky, by God!
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Depends on the paint:lsufantc wrote:And getting paint of brushes? Ive used gas, paint thinner. Nothing seems to work really well to get it all off.
Acrylics - Windex or windshield washer fluid. Windex has ammonia and both have different alcohols that shred acrylics. Sometimes one or the other only will work. Don't sweat it - just quickly switch cleaners and you're fine.
Metallizers - lacquer thinner swish then alcohol. If you can, have a separate container for your metallizer cleaner as the metal flakes will contaminate everything. Mark Yungblut even keeps his airbrushes separate.
Enamels - Mineral spirits.
Oils - Turpentine or mineral spirits.
And all can benefit from a good dousing in Superclean, as it will strip anything, including glazing putties and the Blessed Aves. But don't soak overnight in the stuff, just 15 minutes or so as some brushes have adhesives that are affected by it.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
- Mr. Badwrench
- Posts: 9587
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 6:31 pm
- Location: Wheatridge, Co.
Tamiya tape is awesome. Thin, made of rice paper, not too sticky, easy to cut, forms to curves pretty well, everything a modeling tape should be. For those areas too tricky for tape, I use Parafilm-M.lsufantc wrote:Ive been experimenting with different tapes. Ive found the scotts painter blue tape to work best so far. Any other suggestions?
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.