Normally in the forums most people are polite when looking for advice.Originally posted by DarkWind
I\'m always surprised by the amount of great advice that is given when you politely ask for it
Yes, but usually everyone who asks for advice asks it politely/neutrally, not unpolitely as in \'give meh advice nao!!\'.
Cheers
I don\'t think you can, only your own. When you press the Edit button on someone elses post you\'ll get the edit page for it, but when you try to post your edit you\'ll get the message that you don\'t have permission. It\'s been like this for as long as I can remember.Originally posted by kathrynloch
PS - does any one know why I suddenly have the ability to edit every single post on this board if I wanted to???? :redface:
Originally posted by kathrynloch
On the other hand, how many different ways can you say thin your paint and get rid of your mold lines!
Originally posted by Ritual
I don\'t think you can, only your own. When you press the Edit button on someone elses post you\'ll get the edit page for it, but when you try to post your edit you\'ll get the message that you don\'t have permission. It\'s been like this for as long as I can remember.
Originally posted by Shadzar
I think removing the mold lines is an obvious thing that you can see, but many times \"thin your paint\" can be said in the wrong places. I got advice like that on a few things I have removed from my gallery, but the paint could get no thinner, it was the chalky look I was wanting, or the primer undercoat was thicker than wanted, and being a tabletop mini no need for $1000 quality on a mini that will get handled very often.
Some people may just not care about the mold lines.
So some advice, even though very helpful to make high quality paint jobs, doesn\'t help when the advice is given on something you just don\'t know what you are giving it on.
If it looks like thick paint, you shouldn\'t always assume the person didn\'t thin the paint, or they were using thick paint, there could be many other reasons for the same effect.
Not saying many times paint could be thinned for much better results, just there are times that line doesn\'t seem very helpful, no mater who is giving it. That goes for everywhere mini painter meet, online and off.
Someone new might not know they could get the paint too thin and break it down as well, so even when the right advice to give, \"thin your paint\" may not help the person new to painting.
But yes, very much so the quality of the advice is more important than a lot of it. One good piece of advice is better than 100 bad pieces or incomplete pieces of advice.
But that goes without saying, as is one of the reasons I prefer CMoN to other mini forums, because even the little advice given sometimes is better than the multitude of advice given other places. :drunk:
Agreed. But I specifically brought this up because it was given to me and it was the correct advice.
Ultimately, no advice is going to be perfect. Even if we had the piece to see in person, there would be no guarantee.
When I was in the process of getting my novel published, critiquing varied infinitely. As the creator of the work, it was ultimately my decision on what advice I used and what I didn\'t. It\'s the same with painting. Folks can try different ideas and see what works for them. It\'s the journey that must be taken.
Cheers,
Kat
Originally posted by reverend
Without flogging a dead horse (okay, maybe flogging a dead horse after all) a forum is community. As the Radom feller pointd out near the top/middle of the thread, these forums see only a small percentage of site-users pass through, with less again stopping and becoming part of this particular community-within-a-community. If you want to build up the comments on your WIPs, try sticking around and building a rapport. To be fair, settling into a forum is pretty difficult as it takes time. However, if the hobby interests you and you want to speak to like-minded peope, you\'ll settle in pretty quickly and people will pay more attention to what you\'re doing. Forums, at best, are full of internet acquaintances and buddies. Believe me, a lot of people on this site have met each other (I\'m lagging on that element, but I aim to change that). This forum is a really good one, and the friendships you see are genuine. Get stuck in!
Originally posted by cyberakuma
3) lastly cheat like a ۞۞۞۞۞۞ what takes less time than improving your skills and talking to others to help their skills in the effort of boosting your entries ratings???
registering several accounts oh yes it defeats any change of getting an honest and introspective score on your work but if you are in the business of painting