RE: RE: [OT]-ish : Figure painting question - Craft store Paints
From: "Eli Arndt" <emu2020@w...>
Date: Thu, 24 May 2001 13:28:51 -0700
Subject: RE: RE: [OT]-ish : Figure painting question - Craft store Paints
My experience is that they seem to perform about the same. Me and my
group switched to using the crafts paints almost exclussively to save
money and haven't had any problems. I have found that all I ever really
need to buy are metallics or odd colors from the "actual" miniature
paints.
Eli
>From: "Hudak, Michael" <mihudak@state.pa.us>
>To: "'gzg-l@csua.berkeley.edu'" <gzg-l@csua.berkeley.edu>
>SUBJECTDate: Thu, 24 May 2001 13:12:26 -0400
>Reply-To: gzg-l@csua.berkeley.edu
>
>Just a quick question about craft store paints..... I often see paints
at
>craft stores that have about 4 or so fluid ounces in them.... on sale
they
>go for less than a buck a bottle..... I think they're acrylics
>
>How good are these paints for painting miniatures? Or should I just
get the
>'specialty' paints from the likes of GW, the armory, etc....
>
>Mike Hudak
>mihudak@state.pa.us
>
>Fact is, there's nothing out there you can't do.....
>Yeah, even Santa Claus believes in you.....
>
>Dr Teeth and the Electric Mayhem,"Can you picture that", Muppet Movie
>Soundtrack
>
>
>The Falcon Eggs Have Hatched!
>See How Fast the Hatchlings Grow!
>Visit: http://www.dep.state.pa.us/dep/falcon/
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: cmorgan [mailto:cmorgan@sjc.edu]
>> Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2001 12:27 PM
>> To: gzg-l@csua.berkeley.edu
>> Subject: Re: [OT]-ish : Figure painting question
>>
>>
>> Try a chestnut ink, and not that Games Workshop stuff. Go to
>> an art store
>> and get--I believe--Windsor's Chestnut (for a reddish shade)
>> or sepia (for
>> purer brown). Dilute with Windex. Windex contains a good
>> surfactant for
>> getting into the crevices, and the blue tint will not--and I
>> mean *will
>> not*--tint the wash. Try a series dilution, and work from dilute to
>> stronger. If the dilute solution doesn't work, try a stronger
>> one, until you
>> get the result. I usually dry brush or tough up the
>> surrounding paint job
>> afterwords. But for the sand this works really well for me.
>>
>> > I've used a dirty brown wash on brown and tan
>> > figures to good effect. I've used a black wash
>> > on grey-black figures to good effect. But now,
>> > having a base colour of sand/desert yellow
>> > (with green and brown and wee black bits), I
>> > have no bleedin' idea what to use as a wash.
>> > I'm afraid brown or black will blech-ify (yes I just
>> > invented the word) the yellow/sand based camo
>> > but I can't see how else to get the highlighting.
>>
------------------------------------------------------------