Pour-spout cap for paint jars
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Pour-spout cap for paint jars
I'm starting to work with my Sotar 20/20, and the little itty-bitty paint cup is making me wish for an easy way to pour paint. Does anyone know of replacement caps for the little 1/2 oz glass jars (that MM & Polyscale paints come in) that have have a pour-spout?
I'm looking at the USPlastics website, and some of those look promising, but there's no way to tell a) if they'll fit, and b) if they will seal tightly enough to keep the paint from drying out.
Anybody seen something that fits the bill?
I'm looking at the USPlastics website, and some of those look promising, but there's no way to tell a) if they'll fit, and b) if they will seal tightly enough to keep the paint from drying out.
Anybody seen something that fits the bill?
Don't know of a pour spout, but a neat trick is to use a toothpick or spare bit of sprue. How, you ask?
Point the toothpick into the paint cup of the airbrush at an angle. Pour the paint from the bottle by touching the bottle to the toothpick and let the paint run down the toothpick.
When you pour paint "straight", you're relying on your aim and gravity to hit the target (the paint cup), By doing it with the toothpick, you give the paint a "channel" to follow.
Point the toothpick into the paint cup of the airbrush at an angle. Pour the paint from the bottle by touching the bottle to the toothpick and let the paint run down the toothpick.
When you pour paint "straight", you're relying on your aim and gravity to hit the target (the paint cup), By doing it with the toothpick, you give the paint a "channel" to follow.
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- Pat Amaral
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Instead of pouring out of the jar, I use an eyedropper. I'm guaranteed to get the paint where I want it and it helps to precicely measure ratios when I'm mixing colors (two drops of this color and six drops of that color give me a fairly exact 25%/75% ratio). Also you can mix the paint right in the sotar's cup - no waste (except whats left on the walls of the eyedropper).
I got two glass eyedroppers at the local pharmacy for about $2. The glass ones tend to be a little easier to clean.
I got two glass eyedroppers at the local pharmacy for about $2. The glass ones tend to be a little easier to clean.
Pat A.
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How about using a straw? They are pretty cheap and free if you visit McDonalds or whomever.
You could cut a straw to a shorter workable length, mark a line on the bottom tip guesstimating how much paint you might want and dip it into the paint at that mark. Just close off the top opening with your finger and pull the straw out and transfer the paint into your airbrush by taking your finger off the top of the straw.
You could cut a straw to a shorter workable length, mark a line on the bottom tip guesstimating how much paint you might want and dip it into the paint at that mark. Just close off the top opening with your finger and pull the straw out and transfer the paint into your airbrush by taking your finger off the top of the straw.
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That is exactly what I do, works awesome....... and straws are cheap (if not free). Next trip to a fast food joint, grab a handful. They last forever.Tony Agustin wrote:How about using a straw? They are pretty cheap and free if you visit McDonalds or whomever.
You could cut a straw to a shorter workable length, mark a line on the bottom tip guesstimating how much paint you might want and dip it into the paint at that mark. Just close off the top opening with your finger and pull the straw out and transfer the paint into your airbrush by taking your finger off the top of the straw.
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- Maschinen Krueger
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Good ideas all, thanks guys.
I did call up US Plastics and using my Important Corporate Guy Voice, asked them to send me some samples of various products. Love that trick... works like a charm, no questions asked. Got a box of a variety of plastic bottles, jars, and dispensing lids on the way.
BTW, I use primarily Polyscale, not MM. I hope one of the samples they're sending me will be a good 1-oz size plastic bottle that has some sort of pour-spout that seals well enough to preserve paint. If I can find such a beast, then I'll be a happy camper... Buy a jar of paint, transfer it to the jar, thin to the right consistancy for airbrushing, and be ready for use!
I did call up US Plastics and using my Important Corporate Guy Voice, asked them to send me some samples of various products. Love that trick... works like a charm, no questions asked. Got a box of a variety of plastic bottles, jars, and dispensing lids on the way.
BTW, I use primarily Polyscale, not MM. I hope one of the samples they're sending me will be a good 1-oz size plastic bottle that has some sort of pour-spout that seals well enough to preserve paint. If I can find such a beast, then I'll be a happy camper... Buy a jar of paint, transfer it to the jar, thin to the right consistancy for airbrushing, and be ready for use!
- Jonas Calhoun
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I've saved Visine, contact cleaner, etc bottles for a while. I transfer a lot of paints to them, especially for figure painting. I paint slow enough that having just a drop or two at a time is really useful.
Also, here's another company that sells Vallejo style bottles:
http://www.western-plastics.com/brochur ... l#picture1
Every so often, there's a group that buys a whole mess of them (discount for like 2000 bottles or so), and then splits them among the users. It's one of the figure painting mailing lists, I think.
Dan
Also, here's another company that sells Vallejo style bottles:
http://www.western-plastics.com/brochur ... l#picture1
Every so often, there's a group that buys a whole mess of them (discount for like 2000 bottles or so), and then splits them among the users. It's one of the figure painting mailing lists, I think.
Dan
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