count zero99uk
New member
Undercoating minis has allways been the bane in my life. I suffer from asthma so using spray cans can cause issues. However I did find a solution to this Gesso. Works great on minis shrinks up, dosnt obscure details and is generaly a great surface to paint on.
If your brushing it on say a 10mm, 20mm or 28mm model your fine. Its pretty straight forward on vehicles too just takes a little longer due to the size.
This year however my table will be getting crushed with the Kingdom Death Kickstarter. If you haven't seen the models in that there are some rather large, rather pointy models. Here are 2 examples
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/poots/kingdom-death-monster/posts/773489 The Phoenix is at the top I think its got about a 10 inch wingspan (I could be wrong)
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/poots/kingdom-death-monster/posts/729067 The dragon king is just big.
Now it would not only be for this project I have hoards of minis that want painting and have been lining up just waiting for there time in the lamp light so I would have to look at the thing as being an investment.
The airbrush would *only* be used to prime minis and maybe once in a blue moon paint a large piece of terrain.
Ok onto the research.
I did some digging around on the internet and found that as well as an airbrush you want a compressor, canned gas just isn't worth the hassle and cost over time. Prices vary and lot I could get a full kit with compressor and a couple of airbrushes for £75 for some generic thing with a tank. Or I could spend hundreds on a compressor and then hundreds more on an airbrush.
I spoke with my good friend pete whos been painting 20mm minis for a long time and he said that the airbrush is more trouble than its worth and that in order to get anything worth using, should you accept the set up and tear down time - that is mixing the paint and the cleaning after. His comment was "I don't want to spend 45 mins prepping and cleaning up from a job that could take 5 mins". He did also state that cheap compressors were a waste of time due to them lacking regulators, moisture traps etc. but he hadn't looked into getting one for a llllong time.
If I was to get an airbrush and compressor kit it would have to be this one, or something in a similar price range. http://tinyurl.com/q5jxwzo
this would still be a big investment to me.
The other option is to get something like this
http://lh4.ggpht.com/-ArwEeG32YKM/U...4/kAv7XjLR-Kc/breaking-bad-mask-wallpaper.jpg
And this option works out at about £15
That's a big difference.
If anyone could comment on the efficacy of the cheap compressor sets that would be usefull though any comments that might help swing my mind one way or the other would be great.
Thanks for reading.
If your brushing it on say a 10mm, 20mm or 28mm model your fine. Its pretty straight forward on vehicles too just takes a little longer due to the size.
This year however my table will be getting crushed with the Kingdom Death Kickstarter. If you haven't seen the models in that there are some rather large, rather pointy models. Here are 2 examples
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/poots/kingdom-death-monster/posts/773489 The Phoenix is at the top I think its got about a 10 inch wingspan (I could be wrong)
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/poots/kingdom-death-monster/posts/729067 The dragon king is just big.
Now it would not only be for this project I have hoards of minis that want painting and have been lining up just waiting for there time in the lamp light so I would have to look at the thing as being an investment.
The airbrush would *only* be used to prime minis and maybe once in a blue moon paint a large piece of terrain.
Ok onto the research.
I did some digging around on the internet and found that as well as an airbrush you want a compressor, canned gas just isn't worth the hassle and cost over time. Prices vary and lot I could get a full kit with compressor and a couple of airbrushes for £75 for some generic thing with a tank. Or I could spend hundreds on a compressor and then hundreds more on an airbrush.
I spoke with my good friend pete whos been painting 20mm minis for a long time and he said that the airbrush is more trouble than its worth and that in order to get anything worth using, should you accept the set up and tear down time - that is mixing the paint and the cleaning after. His comment was "I don't want to spend 45 mins prepping and cleaning up from a job that could take 5 mins". He did also state that cheap compressors were a waste of time due to them lacking regulators, moisture traps etc. but he hadn't looked into getting one for a llllong time.
If I was to get an airbrush and compressor kit it would have to be this one, or something in a similar price range. http://tinyurl.com/q5jxwzo
this would still be a big investment to me.
The other option is to get something like this
http://lh4.ggpht.com/-ArwEeG32YKM/U...4/kAv7XjLR-Kc/breaking-bad-mask-wallpaper.jpg
And this option works out at about £15
That's a big difference.
If anyone could comment on the efficacy of the cheap compressor sets that would be usefull though any comments that might help swing my mind one way or the other would be great.
Thanks for reading.