pugwash said:Quick question Mel, looks like the jars of acrylic paint screw straight onto the airbrush, are they a standard size? And obviously if I wanted to use enamels would they have to be put in a jar, and subsequently washing out the jar with thinners?![]()
Yes, you hit the nail on the head Ian. The Tamiya paint jars screw straight onto Badger airbrushes. What I found using enamels (The little Humbrol tins) was that they always needed thinning for airbrushing and you then had to be really scrupulous with the mixing otherwise they wouldn't dry matt. Then the mixed paint had to be decanted into an airbrush jar and finally, (as you say) everything had to be thoroughly washed in yet more thinners. Not only does this cost a fortune in thinners, but you waste such a lot of paint that a little tin often only does one or two jobs. Plus, all this faffing about is often what puts people off using an airbrush. I hope I've shown that it doesn't need to be that way.
I should mention that I went on a trip with the G Scale Society to David Buckingham's brilliant railway a couple of years ago and met David's friend who weathers all of his stock for him. This guy really knew his stuff (he'd done some work on the models for the original Star Wars films) and I got a lot of these tips from him. Also, although he used a higher quality airbrush than mine, he still seldom spent more than about 25 quid on an airbrush.