sanctuary13
New member
hey painters, sculptors, and general madmen/women!
I\'m a recent addition to the CMON community, but I\'m really digging this site.
I started painting years ago... plastic revell models since I was about 4 or 5 years old, then using testors enamels (which I\'ve grown to hate almost as much as... well, more than anything)
when I was in middle school (right around 92 or 93) I discovered an advertisement for Games Workshop in the back of a magazine (Wizard i think), so I sent away for a FREE space marine, which I then ruined with Testors. Getting another free one for my kid sister, I went out and got a few bottles of citadel paints, and never looked back. I thought I was getting pretty good around the time I graduated, having painted a 1k point Sisters of Battle army.
ANYWAYS, I did 6 years of military service in the US Coast Guard after that, rarely painting. In fact I nearly forgot all about painting minis.
After I got out and moved cross country I made a lot of great friends who play wargames like mad with awfully painted minis. You see where this is going.
So now I\'m 30 (soon anyways) and more patient than a high schooler (i hope), so I began painting again, showing my wife how I did a lot of the old paint jobs. This time however I\'ve got the internet, and discovered this CMON thing, which I\'ve probably spent more time on than I should, but my god what I\'ve learned!!!
My painting has tripled in quality (pics soon) and My wife and I decided to redo my Adeptus Sororitas.
I tossed a few into non acetone nail polish remover (metal minis with plastic bases) and it really ripped the paint off nicely, BUT the sand and flock on the bases really gummed up nasty, filling in spots on the minis, ruining a toothbrush, just nastiness.
So my question (at long last) is do you guys know any good tricks for stripping the base features like the flock/sand without ruining the actual metal mini? I tried letting them soak then blasting them with water, but the water seemed to stop the remover instantly from working.
Anyways, I\'ve gone on long enough, thanks!
I\'m a recent addition to the CMON community, but I\'m really digging this site.
I started painting years ago... plastic revell models since I was about 4 or 5 years old, then using testors enamels (which I\'ve grown to hate almost as much as... well, more than anything)
when I was in middle school (right around 92 or 93) I discovered an advertisement for Games Workshop in the back of a magazine (Wizard i think), so I sent away for a FREE space marine, which I then ruined with Testors. Getting another free one for my kid sister, I went out and got a few bottles of citadel paints, and never looked back. I thought I was getting pretty good around the time I graduated, having painted a 1k point Sisters of Battle army.
ANYWAYS, I did 6 years of military service in the US Coast Guard after that, rarely painting. In fact I nearly forgot all about painting minis.
After I got out and moved cross country I made a lot of great friends who play wargames like mad with awfully painted minis. You see where this is going.
So now I\'m 30 (soon anyways) and more patient than a high schooler (i hope), so I began painting again, showing my wife how I did a lot of the old paint jobs. This time however I\'ve got the internet, and discovered this CMON thing, which I\'ve probably spent more time on than I should, but my god what I\'ve learned!!!
My painting has tripled in quality (pics soon) and My wife and I decided to redo my Adeptus Sororitas.
I tossed a few into non acetone nail polish remover (metal minis with plastic bases) and it really ripped the paint off nicely, BUT the sand and flock on the bases really gummed up nasty, filling in spots on the minis, ruining a toothbrush, just nastiness.
So my question (at long last) is do you guys know any good tricks for stripping the base features like the flock/sand without ruining the actual metal mini? I tried letting them soak then blasting them with water, but the water seemed to stop the remover instantly from working.
Anyways, I\'ve gone on long enough, thanks!