c.rainford73 wrote:Lert what tricks did you empty for these results?
A $2 tube of cheap brown acrylic painter's paint, a bag of model railroad sand, pigments and clear coat.
First mix the acrylic painter's paint and railroad sand with a heavy bias on the sand so the mixture is very thick and crunchy, rather than gloopy. Slather it on the areas to muddy up. This provides a textured base layer.
Then I used Vallejo burnt umber and natural sienna pigments, mixing them in three batches, the first batch with a bias towards the umber, the second batch roughly equal mix and the third batch a bias towards the sienna. Applied each batch liberally and thick, then clear coat before the next batch / layer. Tried to put the lighter mix on the areas where the mud would've had opportunity to dry.
This is my first time working with pigments, and I found that the clear coat tends to fade the effects of the pigment, so I went really heavy on it for the exaggerated effect you see on the tank.
JagdPanther / Leopard 2A6 / StuG Ausf. G / KV-2 / M4A3A4 / MTLB / 2.5 ton truck 6x6