I was just wondering which pastels (for those of us who still use them) are more common?
The thin 1/4" sq. pastels or the thicker 1/2" sq. chalk pastels
Pastel Weathering Question
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- Arronax
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I usually scrape the pastel chalk on to an old margarine lid (or similar pallete) using an Xacto knife - you get nice, even dust.
I apply with a short, stiff brush or an eye shadow applicator (sponge tip).
BTW, did you know you can mix pastel dust to get different colors? It's not a real even mix but that can work to your advantage.
I apply with a short, stiff brush or an eye shadow applicator (sponge tip).
BTW, did you know you can mix pastel dust to get different colors? It's not a real even mix but that can work to your advantage.
Jim
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Something, something, something, donkey balls
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Something, something, something, donkey balls
I've found that this is the only way to tone down blast marks. Gives it that white scorched look. I apply it over the black oil blast marks (when dry, of course). I think I mix black, brown and white pastels until I find a good color.Arronax wrote: BTW, did you know you can mix pastel dust to get different colors? It's not a real even mix but that can work to your advantage.
Joe