Paint or assemble first

Ratcals

New member
What\'s the general practice here? Is it preferable to assemble or paint first? I just bought a Cryx Seether Helljack and think it\'s going to be a big pain to paint after it\'s assembled. However, there are some gaps that are going to need filling once it is assembled.
 
I assemble as much as I can befor I paint unless its something that will get in the way or might get broken off in handeling.

If its a seperate piece, I will pre pin the pieces so they can be assembled later. Ill leave that pin long and use something like a pin vise to hold the part while Im painting it. When I do that final assembly, ill make sure Ive scrapped of the paint as best as I can where the parts contact, glue it on and do final touch up.
 

EricJ

Active member
I almost always assemble first, even if it probably isn\'t practical. The only time I don\'t is things like SM backpacks, and things where the joint is VERY hidden.
 

Modderrhu

New member
Definitely assemble first. If it\'s a piece that will get in the way of painting a visible area, or a mounted mini, then assemble after. I hate touching up paint jobs after doing joins.
 

Valander

Member
Really, it depends. ;)

Generally, though, I prefer (like most around here, I think) to assemble as much as possible prior to priming and painting. There are a lot of reasons for this.

Still, though, some models (like a Cryx Slayer or Reaper--I speak from personal experience here) are just about impossible to paint if completely assembled. So, when this is the case, I\'ll generally do as much fitting and prep work as possible, so that when it does come time to put the pieces together, you have the least obvious joins.

One thing I did with my Slayer was to fill the armholes with putty, and press the pinned arms in there to give me a good fit. I then removed the arms, and painted. After everything was sealed, I scraped the areas that were going to be joined so that they were bare metal/putty, and glued them together.

If you do assemble after painting, it\'s very, very important to sand/file/scrape off any paint where you will be applying glue. If you glue over the paint, you\'ll wind up with a weak bond, and thus it will be more likely to suffer undesired \'battle-damage\'.
 

Wolf Fang

Member
depends on the mini.... if i want a high quality i may paint then assemble... if nothing is in the way of other spots tho il\'l assemble then paint
 

Einion

New member
Subassemblies - I never attach parts if it might interfere with painting, although sometimes the difficulty in glueing something on after painting should outweigh this.

Einion
 

Naukhel

Active member
Put things together... you know... that might really help me actually finish some minis...

What a great idea!
 

skarekrow

New member
like i think mike mcvey said in the 90s, if you cant get your brush to it, it probably isnt visible anyways.

i always assemble first.
 

EArkham

Necromancer
A world of depends!

Not the diaper. The conditional.

There\'s a marine on my workdesk now which is in three parts -- base, marine, and backpack. The latter two pieces are on cork by wire. Normally I just leave off the backpack. If it\'s a very dark marine, I may not even do that.

I have a couple of horsemen in a separated state -- base, horse, and rider. If the horsemen were going to be on the ground rather than leaping over it, though, I\'d probably have at least attached the horses to the bases.

The bone giant I did for GD last year was in several pieces until after it was clear coated -- head, body, each of the arms, and legs/base/pelvis.

The general rule of thumb, which I sometimes break, is that the smaller the figure is, the more assembled it will be before painting. The larger it is, the more likely assembly will happen after painting.

Kep
 

Modderrhu

New member
Originally posted by skarekrow
like i think mike mcvey said in the 90s, if you cant get your brush to it, it probably isnt visible anyways.
Well, he certainly didn\'t have this mini in mind when he said that. (the one on the right)
newimage.asp


Here he is in his underclothes, after priming, but before I broke the arm off again.
Clip1.jpg
 

cookster

New member
It depends.

Idealy it would be assemble everything first. HOWEVER some models require to be assembled after painting. It just depends on you and the model your painting.

Like most things it requires experimentation and finding it out for yourself just not by yourselft with guidance of others.
 

bayrodney

New member
Bit of Both eh...
I Assemble my mini\'s first but leave off any shields ( or other bits and bobs ) that may be in the way of the rest of the model.
 

Trevor

Brushlicker and Freak!
Assemble. Tammy definitely said if you can\'t get brush to it, you probably can\'t see it. last mini I tried to paint seperately was a royal pain...
If I can\'t get my brush to it, it stays black...
 

EricJ

Active member
The one I\'m painting now, definately PROBABLY should have been painted first then assembled, but I was too eager to see it all assembled that I just put it together and have been dealing with the headaches of the dynamic of the darn thing since.

It\'s a case where it\'s not so much you can\'t get the brush to something once assembled, but it does make it a lot harder, and definately trickier to do nice blending :(
 

Ritual

New member
Originally posted by EricJ
The one I\'m painting now, definately PROBABLY should have been painted first then assembled, but I was too eager to see it all assembled that I just put it together and have been dealing with the headaches of the dynamic of the darn thing since.

It\'s a case where it\'s not so much you can\'t get the brush to something once assembled, but it does make it a lot harder, and definately trickier to do nice blending :(
Are you painting the same thing I\'m painting? :] And you put everything together before painting? :eek:
 

supervike

Super Moderator
I really don\'t understand how you can paint first, then assemble.

I\'ve tried it, and all the paint gets rubbed off, or the glue gets everywhere, or a gap shows up....

Seriously, how do you people do it?
 

Stuntylover

New member
In painting 28mm figures I assemble before painting and rely on the black undercoat to \"save my bacon\" in the dark recesses EXCEPT - I leave off shields until the body is finished and I paint horses and riders seperately. I remove paint from the point of contact before finishing the assembly. Occasionally, as with cannon, I undercoat sub-assemblies before attaching but then rely on black in the areas where I cannot paint what you cannot see.
 

EricJ

Active member
Originally posted by Ritual
Originally posted by EricJ
The one I\'m painting now, definately PROBABLY should have been painted first then assembled, but I was too eager to see it all assembled that I just put it together and have been dealing with the headaches of the dynamic of the darn thing since.

It\'s a case where it\'s not so much you can\'t get the brush to something once assembled, but it does make it a lot harder, and definately trickier to do nice blending :(
Are you painting the same thing I\'m painting? :] And you put everything together before painting? :eek:

Yeah, dumb aren\'t I :(
 

Ritual

New member
Originally posted by EricJ
Originally posted by Ritual
Originally posted by EricJ
The one I\'m painting now, definately PROBABLY should have been painted first then assembled, but I was too eager to see it all assembled that I just put it together and have been dealing with the headaches of the dynamic of the darn thing since.

It\'s a case where it\'s not so much you can\'t get the brush to something once assembled, but it does make it a lot harder, and definately trickier to do nice blending :(
Are you painting the same thing I\'m painting? :] And you put everything together before painting? :eek:

Yeah, dumb aren\'t I :(
Bold, at least! ;)
 
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