N.Maker | Masking Process Step by Step | RX-78 Full Armor Full GK
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- Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025
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N.Maker
one more thing,
i am going to announce more video and artwork on youtube,
thanks your guys waiting for me so long time,
love you all.
Masking is so relaxing tell you're finished and you realized you went thru a good meter or two of tape on one piece.
Love your work. I have learned a ton from watching your videos!!!!!
The corrext way of airbrushing parts. Takes time but well worth it! ❤
nice, very precise work,
my masking so far is bad, paint is leaking through it, and now i hate masking work
i've never been able to prevent paint from bleeding under tape. I haven't done a lot of airbrushing yet though, and so I imagine (hope) a bunch of lighter applications with an airbrush angled correctly relative to the edge of the tape should help improve that. just gotta keep practicing until I (you) find the right technique that works.
@@SoloRenegade @nitrosonornicotine_nnn Top tip is to spray with the colour you've used first, so that way, when it does bleed, it bleeds the colour you're protecting. So, for example, spray white, then mask, white again, then black.
@@johnrichardson4785 thanks!
Maybe this is a stupid question, but wouldn't it be easier to just paint small parts like that with a brush instead of doing all this work for spraying it?
I thought that, but I get the feeling this is done more 'for the love of it', rather than it being the most efficient way.
I think I'd get some satisfaction from solving the 'puzzle' of how to do it with masking and airbrush, even if brush is quicker.
My tetris brain finds this really therapeutic to watch :)
Brush painting leaves brush strokes in the paint. If a part is REALLY small it works just fine. You're working in small scale with small details, which makes people look very closely. If you expect people to get a close look at fine details, things like brush strokes will become visible. Basically you have to think about how close you want yourself or someone else to look at the thing, then determine if the brush strokes would stand out at that distance.
@@simpleanswer8954 They do not leave brush strokes if you thin the paint properly. Depending on the piece it ofc means you may have to do multiple layers, but thin layers also dry within minutes
@@Robonator14 Acrylics dry in minutes even if you don't thin them to death. Even with a good airbrush you should be doing thin layers. This video shows the paint going on a bit heavy in a single coat, which is also not ideal.
My rule is no brush painting anything too wide or too long to cover in a single pass. I've had some success using ultra thin paint over the natural base color, then letting the clear coat settle any evidence of brush strokes. If you think brush painting works just fine for you... well that's fine for you. But you asked why people would airbrush instead of brushing, and you got an answer. Whether or not it's possible to avoid brush strokes wasn't in the question.
@@Alex-mc4fh I refer you to the last sentence in my my previous comment:
Whether or not it's possible to avoid brush strokes wasn't in the question.
The topic is why some people don't brush paint. The answer covers why some people don't. It isn't a question of possibility.
How long do you wait before spraying the next layer of paint
how long do you wait before painting again?
I tried this for the first time on the back weapons of my Noblesse Oblige(I’ll never forgive kotobukiya for molding all the weapons in ONLY white) and my main problem was that tamiya masking tape would not stay sticking. It lifted and caused some overspray. What a headache
or when the masking tape is too sticky and it peels off the paint :X
You need to pinch tamiya masking tape with tweezer
You need a legit painters tape when doing this as it's much more reliable 👍
Nice! thanks your teacher !
Please again
Great work! 👍
how does he remove the panel line without removing the underlying paint?
Use enamel paint for panel line over lacquer paint for underlying
@@fareezfauzi7933 thanks
Nice..btw..How long do you wait between masking?
Always refer to the paint type you use and it's cure time... But I wait 6 hours before masking lacquers and 24 hours for acrylics. 72 hours for enamel.
Respect
This is just gunpla porn at this point.
Magnifico
好治癒~
Satisfying but an incredibly demanding hobby: Gunpla. There is also an alternative, which is to spend the same time spraying houses for a living wage and buying a metal version of the kit x10 for the same amount of time spent
Thing is, the long and arduous process is kind of the point. If it was easy, then results wouldn’t give you pride. And if it was your profession, the stress imposed by the demands and timelines of your clients would often ruin the zen enjoyment of being wholly focused on a task with no expectations beyond your own standards. It’s why I stopped taking commissions. Absolutely a hobby born of privilege, but hey, I get something tangible at the end unlike video games.
This is expensive hobby,I start collecting tools a little by little.. seriously I have no money left for this hobby,I think I wanted to change my hobby into side income..
i've been here. the masking is so tedious
What a waste of paint, why not brush painting? Would the multi-layer paint too thick that make it difficult to fit back into the rest of the gunplay?
I gotta be honest, I don't see the point of all this masking, all of this could have been achieved by painting with a brush
no, you can't... even if you do, the result would be a mess and overly brush here and there
@@justaguywithoutajenggot9419 mate I paint miniature models and gundam all the time, it's only going to be a mess if your hands shake uncontrollably, as for brush visible brush strokes, that only happens if you don't thin your paints properly. Masking has its use but this is just being quirky for the sake of it
@atlas Whenever I thin my paints for painting I always find that it bleeds onto other parts so I have to mask, how do you get around this problem?
Maybe it is the way people prefer to paint their stuff, I know a good number of people that prefer to airbrush like this then painting it by hand, and there are some effects that are easier to do by airbrush tbh
@@9thphony you might be thinning too much, I suggest getting a wet pallet, then you wouldn't have to thin too much, or even thin at all, just spread the paint around the canvas
God I hate masking