

Following Painless' convention of including pics of his international deliveries, I thought I'd include these.


I seem to recall asking him if he used them, Barry- on his superb Abrams thread, and he said he did. That's a good recommendation, and he also demonstrated just how effective they can beBarryC wrote:I believe these are the Tamiya paints Tankmaniac used on his Tamiya M1A2, I think.![]()
Barry
I saw a video on Youtube of someone using them on wheelnuts, bolt heads, hatches, and recesses on a 1/16 tank, and the transformation was fairly subtle; but sufficient to elevate the model to 'authentic looking' from the 'expensive plaything' level.PainlessWolf wrote:Roy!
Excellent purchase! ;o) I use those same bottles for pin washes. There should be a brush attached to the lid of each bottle but extra, quality brushes are neer' a bad thing.
regards,
Painless
Thanks for the tip, Soeren! This site is a useful gateway to related material, as well as being instructive in its own right. For that reason, I've posted the link hereSoeren wrote:Nice find. You might also take a look at Sockelshop.de. It is based in Germany but ships international. The painting Approach you refer to seems to be the most used. On the other Hand, you can also go onto satin acrylic paints directly too, as Long as you let them sit Long enough. I guess Mig Jimenez was doing like so in some of his Workshops.
The Guys from the IPMS Barbakan channel on you tube start on a Grey base coat and shade during painting and dont go from black. You might have a look at there recent Brummbär build. Nice Approach as well. Layering is their secret.
There's only one model shop within 76 miles of me, Ronnie (Dingwall) and it has a fairly limited stock. I guess Wonderland in Edinburgh is the best place for Tamiya products, and models in general; but living in Wester Ross means buying online is the onlyronnie42 wrote:The new pinwash , asked at 2 model shops in Glasgow. They say distributer does not stock them, so must order on the net.