What with NMM, SENMM and this sort of stuff being the current fad....
Look rather like they\'re far too time consuming for me.
I thought you might be interested in an old technique.
Burnishing only works on metal figures...
To burnish a figure, you first scratch the metal oxide off with a scalpel or similar. This leaves the surface shiny but scratched. You polish this up with a rounded steel tool or bodkin. The surface will then be polished metal, which therefore does a pretty good impression of polished metal.
Finish by painting in lo-lights and gloss varnishing. You can mix grey \"smoke\" or similar in with the varnish to dull the effect.
I uploaded a picture demonstrating the effect as 30701.
The figure reflects as one\'d expect and hence is actually rather difficult to photo with my limited skills.
Parts like the flesh are effectively much darker than the figure, which is reflecting a whole bunch of light.
Hope you find this interesting.
Look rather like they\'re far too time consuming for me.
I thought you might be interested in an old technique.
Burnishing only works on metal figures...
To burnish a figure, you first scratch the metal oxide off with a scalpel or similar. This leaves the surface shiny but scratched. You polish this up with a rounded steel tool or bodkin. The surface will then be polished metal, which therefore does a pretty good impression of polished metal.
Finish by painting in lo-lights and gloss varnishing. You can mix grey \"smoke\" or similar in with the varnish to dull the effect.
I uploaded a picture demonstrating the effect as 30701.
The figure reflects as one\'d expect and hence is actually rather difficult to photo with my limited skills.
Parts like the flesh are effectively much darker than the figure, which is reflecting a whole bunch of light.
Hope you find this interesting.