Anyone try using pencils to bring out detail?
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Anyone try using pencils to bring out detail?
I am experimenting with various weathering techniques to bring out some of the detail in the maquis raider model I am working on. Has anyone tried using a pencil (graphite, charcoal, etc.) to trace some of the finer detail? I thought I read about someone doing this once, but I don't remembeer much about it. Suggestions?
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IIRC model builders from ILM used pencils to draw panel lines on the Star Destroyer models. It is certainly an intersting way to flesh out panel lines without the worry of overdoing a wash (since you're not doing one). Pencil lines, however will fade away over time, depending on the intensity of light in the area where you'll display the model, so it's not a lasting finish.
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Actually, this was a technique used by the Anderson model makers in the early sixties. Drawing panel lines on with a pencil was one thing but you can get another effect to show weeping joints. Scribble some pencil lead near the edge of a sheet of paper. Offer the edge of the sheet of paper up to the model along a panel line and then starting with your finger in the pencil scribble, push your finger off the paper onto the model. Your finger will make a dirty smudge in the direction of movement. Keep your smudges running in the direction of any slipstream or gravity. Also you need to pull the paper away from the panel line slightly as the step down from paper to model often leaves a clean gap before the smudge begins. You can also do away with the paper completely. Draw the panel line in pencil and then smudge it with your finger. A little experimentation will soon determine how heavy you want to go. A clear fixing coat is a good idea although not necessarily essential.
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I used a pencil on my small Pegasus in the lines and then drew on my own lines for more effect(as well as chalks added):
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A LIGHT clear flat, misted on as you "woosh" the subject through a gentle fog of clear flat will do it. As I said - "LIGHT."Callandor wrote:ok, so I started detailing some of the panel lines and such and I like the results for the most part. My only complaint is that the graphite pencils have a glossiness that makes the lead "disappear" at certain light angles. Will some kind of clear coat even that out?
Also, you must make the " woosh" sound for it to work.
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I use technical drafting pencils from Rotring. I use the "F" grade which is intended for use on polyester drafting film.
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I did all of the gridlines on this Defiant with a pencil and an eraser. I went over the gridlines first with a pencil and then erased all of it. What's left is what you see there and the great thing about it is that you can be as messy as you want and you can't screw it up.
I did all of the gridlines on this Defiant with a pencil and an eraser. I went over the gridlines first with a pencil and then erased all of it. What's left is what you see there and the great thing about it is that you can be as messy as you want and you can't screw it up.
Check out Derwent INKTENSE colored pencils at your local art store. Works just like their water-colour pencils, BUT, once they dry they are very durable. I've used several of the browns, blacks, and grays, for everything from panel lines, to rust and oil smears. Even after casual handling, the color stays where you put it - no clear coat needed.
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Wax based color pencils can be blended with de-natured alcohol- or a "clear blending marker".
You can make a gradient with say, light brown over yellow, and blend it to look nicely weathered.
I use this on small-scale ships and it looks pretty good- I use pencils to highlight panel lines- and to add additional panels where scribing would be off-scale (2500th scale and smaller should only have major hull panels scribed: if that!).
You can make a gradient with say, light brown over yellow, and blend it to look nicely weathered.
I use this on small-scale ships and it looks pretty good- I use pencils to highlight panel lines- and to add additional panels where scribing would be off-scale (2500th scale and smaller should only have major hull panels scribed: if that!).
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I haven't used them for panel lines but larger areas of scorching, smudges of leaky stuff and just highlighting raised detail and edges. I had some old watercolour pencils that were no good because the lead was broken every 5-10mm. While painting the larger Kazon ship I used a knife to scrape off the lead into a small pile of powder from the black and brown ones (and later an ordinary 3B graphite pencil). Then using my finger I rubbed it along the areas I wanted it. It worked well and didn't run when I gave it a clearcoat.
I suppose it'd work for anything that could be ground to a powder like consistency (watercolour paint, pastels, chalk etc). Depending on how much you rubbed it on and how fine the particles are the results varied from a fairly even gradient to the larger chunks leaving scratches.
I suppose it'd work for anything that could be ground to a powder like consistency (watercolour paint, pastels, chalk etc). Depending on how much you rubbed it on and how fine the particles are the results varied from a fairly even gradient to the larger chunks leaving scratches.