paddy
Well-known member
chips with everything
:laugh:
Take model part..Spray silver a put a few drops of Humbrol maskol on (its a liquid rubber)
Dab it about a bit with a small bit of sponge.
spray the whole lot black
once dry just rub the whole thing with your finger and the rubber will roll off ( yes its upside down
You could then add a flat coat to blend the whole thing in and give the chipped areas a more old look as i did on my valve covers on the Spit. I used a semi gloss clear coat on the prop.
For armour you might be better to use salt
Spray your item silver and before it dries add a little salt
Spray you top coat, in this case green
And when dry rub it with a non scratch scouring pad
This gives a texture finish but if you add the salt once the base coat is dry it doesn't give the texture and is easier to rub off. that said if you dont want a texture then usae maskol. the advantage of salt is you can sprinkle it over a large area quite randomly.... Just make sure your first top coat is light ( mist it on ) so you dont blow the salt off with the air brush
This is just a principle. you could make your base coat Copper for pipes or red rust, maybe a chrome silver, add maskol then a flat top coat which gives the silver flat dope finish peeling from the NMF on my spit to show chrome silver areas underneath along edges like this
.
Lots of fun experimenting
Marskol can be applied much more specifically with a fine brush to give a chipped effect along edges like canopy slides and frames. just make sure your chipping is in a suitable scale


Take model part..Spray silver a put a few drops of Humbrol maskol on (its a liquid rubber)

Dab it about a bit with a small bit of sponge.

spray the whole lot black

once dry just rub the whole thing with your finger and the rubber will roll off ( yes its upside down

You could then add a flat coat to blend the whole thing in and give the chipped areas a more old look as i did on my valve covers on the Spit. I used a semi gloss clear coat on the prop.

For armour you might be better to use salt
Spray your item silver and before it dries add a little salt


Spray you top coat, in this case green

And when dry rub it with a non scratch scouring pad

This gives a texture finish but if you add the salt once the base coat is dry it doesn't give the texture and is easier to rub off. that said if you dont want a texture then usae maskol. the advantage of salt is you can sprinkle it over a large area quite randomly.... Just make sure your first top coat is light ( mist it on ) so you dont blow the salt off with the air brush
This is just a principle. you could make your base coat Copper for pipes or red rust, maybe a chrome silver, add maskol then a flat top coat which gives the silver flat dope finish peeling from the NMF on my spit to show chrome silver areas underneath along edges like this

Lots of fun experimenting
Marskol can be applied much more specifically with a fine brush to give a chipped effect along edges like canopy slides and frames. just make sure your chipping is in a suitable scale