Thanks guys!
@bullfrog, GSW fluorescent paints are really glowing under UV lights the only problem is trying to photograph a model with fluo paints in them. I had painted the Craven King with fluo paints almost entirely but i could not capture all of the spectrum of colors i could see with my eyes under UV lights, all of the cyan was gone in the pictures and replace with violets and blues. Aparently you can correct that in post editing but it"s out of my league. I find the paints to work well, just need to shake them really well as the pigments tend to separate and collect at the bottom more than acrylic paints. I don't know if Scale75 have a white fluo paint but GSW has one and that is what we should use as white when we paint with those.
@Dexter, I changed many things in the way i proceed with my projects in the past few months and to answer your questions yes i considered using NMM on a model but i never tried it. That is something i would like to try soon. Even the way i do TMM as evolved considerably since i started to paint with this type of metallic paints (lacquer base metallic paints) it is a very delicate and nerves wrecking paint as the lacquer in the paint start melting any layers of paints you already have on the miniature, meaning you can literally erase your work back to the resin, if you brush too hard on the same spot after applying lacquer paint and it is not completely dry. I don't know if what i said makes sense, it is like stripping. Why would i deal with such nerve wrecking technique? Well obviously for the shine these paint can produce and also i use the negative melting effect to my advantage to blend the colors with the metal, you just need to be extremely careful in the way you proceed (to not strip your mini back to the resin). My recently newly developed technique with these paints reduce to a minimum the chances of stripping the paint as i use a stippling technique instead of a more rough kind of drybrush i was using before. I also ditch the inks i was using in my techniques the past 5 years, i noticed inks leave a shinny finish like satin varnish... it's really hard to photograph as it makes reflection spots in the pictures. So yeah my technique from now on is going to be shading the metals exclusivly with acrylic paints instead of inks.