I quit tattooing a numbers of years ago. I pulled out my old color box had many inks that were full, but long expired. It's not safe to use expired ink on a person, but I couldn't bring myself to toss it. Tattoo ink is meant to stay wet forever. But the pigments are very strong. So I'm mixing it with Createx UVLS clear for a binder and it is a great sourse of color for airbrushing. I also use it to change or intensify the colors of my Createx and Golden paints.
What did you use on that wood for the Sherman to keep the sandbags held up? Like was it an actual piece of thin wood slice or from another model scenery pack?
I love it the. One im naking is. Ship. Number 2. Number one is here on my channel. I did it for. A film. Class. Vfx. Which i. Got an a. In college. Im. Still am. But. It got stopoed. My. Film is gonna be.ike. a b. Movie. Simole. Its. Called. Star. Jock inspired by. Tne. Mandaloriwn
I asked Justin (he is away from his computer today), he says he would never suggest using a glossy primer. and if you want really dark colors prime black for sure.
@@mambamentality2663 Sure, you can gloss coat that area, and the mask it off (with painters tape) to dull coat the rest of the model if you just wanted a specific part glossy, or find a brush on gloss varnish you like :)
@@philray8297 Its still there at the same link as above www.secretweaponminiatures.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=13&products_id=134 And here is the crushed glass by itself www.secretweaponminiatures.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=13&products_id=106
Re: spare foam -- Around here, we call it "pluck-foam" -- squares of foam ripped out of those foam-lined trays and cases used for storing minis. (You just *pluck* out the squares of foam as needed to make space for a place for your miniatures to nestle in.) I use bags of the stuff as packing filler, but also sometimes I'll use craft glue (regular white glue or Tacky Glue) to glue it down to cardboard/foam-core trays to cushion terrain boards in storage. But, hey, I've got so much spare, having another use (speckling paint texture!) is certainly welcome. :)
It depends on the tank. You can always add black or Payne's Gray to your base color, and use that for chipping. Then highlight with a bit of white added to the base color.
So I been working with Tamiya spray cans for paints like gold, light green, light blue, etc. The primer I been using is just a standard, gray Testors primer. Anyways, my question is would I get a better, brighter finish with gold, light green, light blue, if I used white primer instead of gray?
These days I always do -- because I finally understood that even though the paint might be 100% non-toxic, the fine particles can still give me cancer. ALL OF THE PRECAUTIONS BECAUSE LIFE IS AMAZING BRO!