GZG List archives -- July 2006

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Re: [GZG] Painting tips?



Very cool tip.

For my next trick, I went out at lunchtime and bought a sheet of Badger Frisket paper. Basically a light acetate film, lightly tacky on side. I pulled a sheet out of an open pack and it's a) pretty darned thin and b) designed for masking for airbrush projects. Now, that said, the tape I tried to use was desgined for use by modelers too, so I'm not all that hopeful. Tonight I'll try making some patterns and see if they work any better than the tape ones. If not, I'll move on to either silly putty or make a template and live with the fuzziness. Or get out my paint brushes. Or something. :)

J

John K. Lerchey
Assistant Director for Incident Response
Information Security Office
Carnegie Mellon University

On Thu, 27 Jul 2006, Allan Goodall wrote:

On 7/27/06, gzg-l-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<gzg-l-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2006 10:49:08 -0400 (EDT)
From: John K Lerchey <lerchey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Paining on liquid mask - If I wanted to paint on liquid mask, I'd just
paint on the paint. :)

This isn't really a reply to John's post. I just wanted to point out a use for a liquid mask. I've heard a lot of people say that liquid mask is pretty useless as you still have to paint it on. However, it allows you to paint over an area you've already painted so that you could then airbrush over the whole area.

Just thought I'd point that out.

Pieces of tape.  That's essentially what I was using.  I was actually
using a thin masking tape made for doing this kind of work on models.  It
didn't work because the ships are ALL covered in small panels and such
(makes for nice models, but makes for difficult painting of clean lines).

One problem people complain about with tape is that there's always some bleed under the tape, making it less than crisp. I saw a solution to this on one of those TLC channel home improvement shows.

Step 1: Paint the base colour.

Step 2: Tape the area you want to mask off.

Step 3: Paint over the edge of the tape with the base colour. This
forms a paint seal on the edge of the tape, and the bleed under the
tape is the same colour as the base coat.

Step 4: Paint the unmasked area. It can't bleed under the tape because
of the seal you made in step 3.

Now, I've seen it done with walls with laytex paint. I don't know how
well it will work with acrylics on miniatures.

Allan
--
Allan Goodall            http://www.hyperbear.com
agoodall@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
awgoodall@xxxxxxxxx
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