So here I am starting to paint my 1/72 Y-Wing, and I'm trying to preshade all the panel lines on the cockpit so that they have good contrast once the main color goes on. But I can't for the life of me find a sweet spot of air pressure and paint viscosity to save my life. I either get quick dots that spider or I get practically a wash that just runs everywhere.
Any tips on how to practice this or any cheap items with panel lines I can use to perfect the technique?
Practicing panel line preshading
Moderators: DasPhule, Moderators
Have ya ever seen Doog's Blackbasing technique?
https://doogsmodels.com/2014/07/03/tech ... ck-basing/
https://doogsmodels.com/2014/07/03/tech ... ck-basing/
Have ya ever seen Doog's Blackbasing technique?
https://doogsmodels.com/2014/07/03/tech ... ck-basing/
https://doogsmodels.com/2014/07/03/tech ... ck-basing/
Practice, practice, practice.
I usually cover in all black or a dark grey or brown, depending on the effect I'm after.
With Tamiya I think about 50-50 with Tamiya thinner and spray about 12 psi. Starting @ the center of a panel fill lightly to about 1/8 or so from the panel. Don't worry if if looks a mess. Do all the panels in the area that way. Then come back and pull a little farther away and repeat. Keep going until it looks the way you want. If you really hate it, hit it with some paint remover and go @ it again.
I usually cover in all black or a dark grey or brown, depending on the effect I'm after.
With Tamiya I think about 50-50 with Tamiya thinner and spray about 12 psi. Starting @ the center of a panel fill lightly to about 1/8 or so from the panel. Don't worry if if looks a mess. Do all the panels in the area that way. Then come back and pull a little farther away and repeat. Keep going until it looks the way you want. If you really hate it, hit it with some paint remover and go @ it again.
Abolish Alliteration
- TazMan2000
- Posts: 1128
- Joined: Wed Jul 22, 2009 8:26 pm
- Location: Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada
Very good information. Practice is key, as Kylwell mentioned. If you try something and screw up, you haven't made a mistake, you've just leaned a way not to do it. A lot of these techniques we use now have come from modellers experimenting and sharing their experiences. Everyone has made goof-ups with paint jobs, including the pros, and the only way to get better is to practice...not necessarily on an an actual model, but you can try out a new technique on a piece of scrap plastic (paper may not be suitable because of its hygroscopicity).
TazMan2000
TazMan2000