dnaGRIM published an article on what he refers to as the \"cult of clear primer\".
A week ago I turned yet another figure into a speckled, lumpy mess after the tip on the primer clogged, so I tried dnaGRIM\'s dullcoat method. Worked pretty well, so I tried it on a second figure. This was a Fenryll resin, and nothing I do gets the paint to stick to the dullcoat. What I think might be happening is that the dullcoat isn\'t sticking to the resin and when paint is applied it rips the \"primer\" off... The paint color isn\'t as strong as normal.
Problem is, I now don\'t want to go back to chunky spray paints and brush-on primers, and I just got this big stack of Fenryll weaping for some color. (Brushed primers on Fenryll looks AWFUL, IMO. Chunky, needs at least two coats, and stubborn brushlines.)
Does anyone have a positive experience priming Fenrylls? I don\'t want to lose that great detailing by heavy priming, and my thinned primer of choice ain\'t sticking.
- Otter
\"Never send a ferret to do a weasel\'s work\"
A week ago I turned yet another figure into a speckled, lumpy mess after the tip on the primer clogged, so I tried dnaGRIM\'s dullcoat method. Worked pretty well, so I tried it on a second figure. This was a Fenryll resin, and nothing I do gets the paint to stick to the dullcoat. What I think might be happening is that the dullcoat isn\'t sticking to the resin and when paint is applied it rips the \"primer\" off... The paint color isn\'t as strong as normal.
Problem is, I now don\'t want to go back to chunky spray paints and brush-on primers, and I just got this big stack of Fenryll weaping for some color. (Brushed primers on Fenryll looks AWFUL, IMO. Chunky, needs at least two coats, and stubborn brushlines.)
Does anyone have a positive experience priming Fenrylls? I don\'t want to lose that great detailing by heavy priming, and my thinned primer of choice ain\'t sticking.
- Otter
\"Never send a ferret to do a weasel\'s work\"