Trying Something New
So for the Knight Tyrant I’ve put together a Rhino to act as a scenic base. The plan is to paint it as a Dark Angels tank (My buddy plays Dark Angels). So I’m putting down an initial metallic layer with rusting and then I plan to try the hairspray & salt chipping method.
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@warhammer40k
Live and learn: I may have over done it on the weathering. I think this is a case of “less is more”. I’m going to let it dry a bit and then go back with a light drybrush to bring back a bit of the green. That said, this technique is really cool, just not for this specific application.@thatdamnelf @warhammer40k Honestly, as a basing piece, I think the weathering’s fine. Imo it suggests the war’s been going on quite a while there.
I’ve found that in terms of area less can be more, while in terms of brightness and saturation you can sometimes really pump it up.
My main rust recipe is sponging gently with foam, starting with brown, then dark brown red, and up through oranges. Very light passes. Streaking fluids from companies like AK can be good if you plan on doing a lot of rust.
If you want a real expert, I’d watch Night Shift and try to adapt some techniques.
What’s the hairspray and salt chipping method?
@twotonebax
Paint your “underlayers” - as seen here it’s bare metal & rust.
Varnish the model and let that dry for 24+ hours.
Then get some hairspray and salt, “prime” the entire model with a thick coat of hairspray; while it’s still wet sprinkle salt all over it so the salt sticks to the hairspray. Let dry for an hour.
Paint the model whatever color you want the model to be when done.
Once that’s dry using an old toothbrush and hot water, rub away at the salt, it’ll dissolve and come loose.