Rust?

Valcanoric

New member
Hi all this is my first post on here and I have a question, how do you achive realistic looking rust. I play orks and I need to rust up some stuff, also any help on realistic oxadation would be great thanks in advance.
 

uberdark

New member
try looking at sukigods painting log in work in progress. and mine under ubers wip. we both are avid ork players and have lots of conversions with tons of painting steps and stages.
 

freakinacage

Well-known member
best rust i have achieved or seen achieved is with pigments. mig do a great set of rusts, adds a texture too which looks spot on
 

Einion

New member
Could you show us what you think is realistic? :pwp:

Realistic for gaming minis and realistic for a single figure can often be quite different.

Einion
 

Valcanoric

New member
Thanks so much guys, mig pigments is the way i am going can you seal them with matt spray like you do normal minis or do you have to do something special?
 

Dragonsreach

Super Moderator
Staff member
Vallejo Airbrush Paints have a colour called RUST and it looks exactly like rust staining.
Add it around rivit heads to look like collection point corrosion, added to other effects like MIG pigments and or Pastel powder and it does work.
 

templar143

New member
i have just bought some pastels and am looking for application tips as well. i have a small mortar/pestal to grind them up. i'm reading application with white spirits or turpentine is a good way to go. my fear is the turp. or spirits will mess with the paint. should i seal the model with matte varnish then apply or just go ahead and apply the slurry when mixed and then seal? also, would rubbing alcohol work?, i've seen that suggested also. any other tips would be a great help. thanks in advance!
 

Dragonsreach

Super Moderator
Staff member
i have just bought some pastels and am looking for application tips as well. i have a small mortar/pestal to grind them up.
Personally I use matt varnish painted on in thin amounts and scrape the pastel with a sharp blade and blow away the excess. Alow to dry and repeat as needed.
 

Einion

New member
templar143 said:
i have a small mortar/pestal to grind them up.
No need to grind them, just pare the edge with a sharp blade and you'll get a fine powder in small quantities to use as you need. Course if you want to reduce the entire stick to powder in a single go so you can jar it up go for it.

templar143 said:
i'm reading application with white spirits or turpentine is a good way to go. my fear is the turp. or spirits will mess with the paint.
Should have no affect on acrylic/vinyl paints.

Rubbing alcohol will on the other hand dissolve your paint.

templar143 said:
should i seal the model with matte varnish then apply or just go ahead and apply the slurry when mixed and then seal?
I would try to minimise the number of coats of varnish, so try it directly over the paint, let it dry fully, then seal. That way you're only applying one coat, reducing the chances of a problem. And you use less varnish!

Einion
 

Trevor

Brushlicker and Freak!
Lighter fuel works as well.
If its the last thing you do, no need for any fixer, just dust it on and it should stick fine (unless the surface is gloss or semi-gloss).
 
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