Toning down the stealth tanker

Rhinochugger

Retired Oik
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It started like this - bit brash and impossibly clean

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Early doors - just the frame first. Sometimes more is less, more or less :laugh:

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Only very lightly, Steven

My take on weathering is that you need to decide whay you want to represent. Ist it just the usual dirt of the job, or a filthy thing that has not been cleaned for years, or something in decay where paint is starting to flake off?

This one falls into the first category.
 
SPOT ON MATE!! good one..lightly weathering...well done..
what did u do with it? BRUSH? or ? paint?
 
Mainly using the foam end of the little brush that comes with the Tamiya weathering powders.

A bit of Q-tips as well - nothing acrylic wanted to take on the Bachmann paint to start with - but I got there in the end :thumbup:
 
Rhinochugger said:
Mainly using the foam end of the little brush that comes with the Tamiya weathering powders.

I've not come across them. How do they work - what do you fix them with?
 
C&S said:
Rhinochugger said:
Mainly using the foam end of the little brush that comes with the Tamiya weathering powders.

I've not come across them. How do they work - what do you fix them with?
They're like a block of colour, and you either stipple tem on with a coarse brush, or apply them with a very small sponge.

Acrylic varnish - sprayed is best. I've used both Humbrol cans and airbrush - the tanker was airbrushed, because matt acrylic can sometimes go cloudy from the spray can due to the carrier fluids.

Here's one that had the powders applied to a matt paint - far easier to get a good result :thumbup:

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