Thanks to everyone for the help and encouragement! Almost every technique is new to me. I may get stuck in a day or two, depending on when my paints arrive from Blick. Getting the paint only on the surface seems like the most intimidating aspect so far, but what I have learned is that there is no substitute for just jumping in and trying it. My sense is that mistakes can be corrected with a wire brush.
Comments
In doubt, the forum has all the answers, .....or almost...
Rick
Anything is fixable or redoable, its the best way to learn.
Keep us posted.
Your beginnings are great and I must posit sir, that you are no longer a Rookie. If your fingers are so stained with C&A that you cannot activate the thumbprint security on your phone – you are on your way.
I shall watch your thread with admiration. I am 1/3 of the way through O’Neil’s, planning to put it together with the Foundry. Following a step or two behind the masters always improves my attempts.
Thanks for your comment on Jays thread and we sincerely look forward to reading many more.
I appreciate all of the encouragement! I hesitate to post something trivial, but my latest order from Blick arrived today. I bought all of the recommended colors that they had in stock. No excuse now for waiting to try the "just on the surface" painting technique on the Blacksmith Shop.
Rick
(great colour pallet)
I love to follow every build made here on the forum.
You are doing just fine!!
Also I went to your link for Shapeways posted on the thread about figures and perused some of the details. Don't know if anyone has purchased any of these 3D printed parts and are they of a reasonable quality.
I can tell you first hand, take your time and follow Brett’s directions you can’t go wrong!
You’re off to a great start!
This plastic organizer was in my goodie box from Blick on Saturday and I'm using it for chalk sticks and powder. I found that scraping is not my strong suit so I tried a slightly different approach today for a few more pieces that needed to be stained. I made a makeshift mortar and pestle using an allen wrench and a plastic tub and ground each of the three chalk colors into a powder and stored them in individual compartments. I used the palette knife to bring a tiny amount of the powder to the wood. There is still the danger of using too much, but that is partly mitigated by using the knife. I might get a real mortar and pestle if I decide to continue that approach. The box has moveable dividers and seems perfect for the chalk sticks and powder.
That being said, I do have pre-scraped chalk for casting work, but that's a whole other ball game...
it gets to a point where you don't need to refer to the label on the stick. you'll recognize it by sight. i have a similar box for mine and labeled them all in the beginning, but these days its just a mish mash of sticks and the labels don't help at all. the umbers are in one compartment, the rusts in another. it's helpful, but not required.
by the way fellas, it turns out that jay is about 30 miles from me, so when the corona scare is finally over we're gonna meet up somewhere and discuss our membership in this cult......