im painting the uss enterprise and am having some issues with the paint colour.
so far i have just done 2 coats of grey primer so it is even coat all over.
im thinking of painting it white, but i dont want it to be a bright white. im hoping that the grey primer will darken the shade.
secondly
ive got to paint an aztec design on the body. im thinking of doing this with maybe an enamel of pearlescent white, but id like the finish to be almost as if the design is showing through a complete top layer, almost as if hte top layer is slightly transparent / translucent.
any ideas on how i could achieve this
making white a darker shade, and slightl transparent
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- Mr. Badwrench
- Posts: 9587
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 6:31 pm
- Location: Wheatridge, Co.
The gray primer will darken your white paint. Probably end up in the neighborhood of "sky gray" or "light camo gray" depending on your white paint. After that, you have several choices for the aztec. Assuming you are not using the decals, you could airbrush AutoAir Pearl White, or rattle can Krylon Pearl clear coat. - which looks really cool IMHO.
For my 1:1000 kit, I preshaded the grid lines with black, then sprayed the ship white, followed with an uneven coat of the Krylon Pearl. Then I applied the aztec decals, then a mist coat of white to blend everything together before I added the marking and lettering decals.
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For my 1:1000 kit, I preshaded the grid lines with black, then sprayed the ship white, followed with an uneven coat of the Krylon Pearl. Then I applied the aztec decals, then a mist coat of white to blend everything together before I added the marking and lettering decals.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid ... =3&theater
- Mr. Badwrench
- Posts: 9587
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 6:31 pm
- Location: Wheatridge, Co.
That's one of the big differences between using spray cans and an airbrush. Spray cans give you a nice, even, opaque coat, even if that's not what you want. With an airbrush you can apply just exactly as much paint as needed, even if it's only a tiny bit. But they take a lot more practice. I'm not sure how you can get what you want using spray cans only.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
My tip: do NOT use a full/pure white at all, rather go for a very light gray. Pure white makes model kits look pretty toylike, and if there's no color reference, the very light gray will look like white - but the kit will overall look less "harsh". And the gray will create a more even finish...
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