Washes & Oil Paints - Soviet Ball Tank "Sharotank" (Miniart 1/35 Scale Model Weathering Tutorial)
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- Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
- In this tutorial I'm applying washes and some oil paint filters/fading to this ball tank.
Washes are great for outlining details, while oil paints can alter, fade and blend the base coat. We can also use them to add more contrast in form of shadows and highlights.
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Disclaimer: I am not paid to promote any products shown in this video. I simply use what I have as long as it works for me.
Music: No Copyright Music from RUclips Audio Library Хобби
I love your sense of humor! 😀😃
Outstanding work Martin....you make techniques others make look long, drawn out and difficult, so much easier to understand, and with a cracking sense of humour....loving this ball tank tutorials....I’m currently working on a Ma.K Ammoknight and all these techniques will be applied....thanks for the effort in producing these videos 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Here I find myself going back and watching your first videos. Knowing what I know now.. this couldn't have been a more perfect video to start your channel with. Simple yet complex at the same time. Showcasing all types of techniques. It's no wonder your channel grew to what it is today.
Great to see a well edited, funny video with expert advise and proper English (Spanish modeling companies learn from this!!). I am following this series and enjoy them immensely! Thank you Martin
Lol my English leaves a lot to be desired, but I'm working on it with each video, so I can speak faster and more fluently. Thanks so much Michal!
Dude this content is amazing! Your funny, informative and actually good at modeling!
It's great to see some fantastic attention to detail on this model. I watch a lot of Plasmo but am glad I found your channel too. Keep up the good work!
I hate to say it, cause I love PLASMO, but NS is better imho.
Fantastic! Your lighting, camera work and commentary are all excellent! Looking forward to everything you do in the future, you're going to have a bright future on RUclips, I can already tell.
Thank you so much! We'll see.
You was telling truth man 👍
He told the truth
Simply wow!
это великолепно! Спасибо за такие видео. Все понятно и даже с юмором) Желаю успехов и признания!))
thank you for such a condense descriptive video !
I think a very quick "before and after" side by side clip, or part of shots, with with a transition. To better show how much, even such subtle effects change the model.
Good idea, thank you!
I do like your "meditation" technique on 2:10
Hell yeah, I almost spilled a whole cup of coffe over my keyboard rofl :)
Brilliant and hilarious! 😀 More!
Thanks! More stuff coming soon!
@@NightShiftScaleModels I can't wait, I can't wait! 😀
On large sab sided squarish turret sides,i stipple with Mr 1200 lightly,then when half dry,wipe with greaseproof paper.Great commentary and filming,cheers.
Greaseproof paper, you mean something like baking paper? And you just press it against the almost dry Surfacer to emphasize the texture? That sounds like a great technique, must try!
Yes,baking paper.I used it on a King tiger initial turret.It gave a bit more interest to a large flat plate,.Albion alloys sells 'connecto+' have you seen it?Great help for scratchbuilding.Ive been trying to convince PM36 to try soft pencil's for ages.I love the effects,and putting down before hairspray or chipping fluid in \35 on corners.Great work,cheers mate.
Impressive, most impressive!
Why is this so relaxing like damn
I remember when you posted last video on facebook group, i watched it and i saw quality content. I hope you keep up your videos and maybe even make some awesome tutorials. Nice vid!!
Thank you! Yes, the videos will keep coming (for now, but I hope I'll be able to maintain a consistent schedule) and yes, I plan on making specific, detailed tutorials on each technique.
Nice!
this has given me a whole new drive to pick my childhood hobbies, thanks. I notice that you speed up a lot of your brushwork, however I'm finding it difficult to properly understand the technique involved in the blending and brush movements. could you perhaps do a few videos that show some realtime footage that gets gradually faster? Great videos, and I love the dry humour.
Hey that's great! And a very good suggestion, I'm fiddling with that in my newer videos. I understand it can get hard to follow. I'll focus on that especially in my dedicated technique tutorials for sure. Thanks again!
AND BOOOOOM another awesome video master Martin
BOOM whaddup my dude!
Yeah boi
I keep hearing the term “filter”. What exactly is the filter? I was surprised how you just dotted it like confetti and the final result. Awesome work.
A filter is where you apply a colour or colours, and spread it out over a wide area to give the effect of subtle colour changes or weathering over the entire surface of the model. It is the opposite of a wash , which is either much stronger in its colour change or applied to very specific areas only, like rivets or hatches etc.. Hope this helps even if it is a bit late.
👍 👍 👍 👍
Did the oil dots make much difference? Thanks for the video.
Cracking video Martin! I presume you could just swap an oil paint for the wash? Or does the wash have an advantage over the oil? Also, how quickly does the wilder oils dry?
Cheers!
Thanks John! I usually use enamel washes on simple models like this, because they dry faster. If I were painting a complex model with lots of rivets for example, I would probably go for oils. Enamel wash dries in like 2-3 days, while oils can take up to 5-7 days when they're applied like a wash. So it depends how fast you want to work. I personally enjoy enamel washes a bit more. The Wilder oils dry very fast, they can become rock solid in a few hours on a flat surface. On a glossy one, about a day.
Also it depends if the base coat is glossy or flat. If you spill enamel washes over a flat surface, you better clean the excess in a manner of minutes, otherwise they're there to stay. Same goes with oils.
HeHee Boi! =)
I used GWs acrylic based purity seal on a GW Valkyrie model. when I applied my oil wash (I used white spirits), it ate through the varnish and the result turned out messy. what can I do to clean it up?
I guess strip the paint down, start over and use a strong lacquer based varnish such as Tamiya or Gunze
Hype
Kay? :D
@@NightShiftScaleModels massanger