Lead Adventure Forum
Other Stuff => Workbench => Tutorials => Topic started by: terrain_sherlock on 19 January 2009, 03:31:42 PM
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I was wondering if anyone else uses brush markers for painting..
I mean in lieu of paint-and-brush..?
My method is gray prime / white dry brush / use brush markers to put on base coat..
then inks if needed (or even traditional acrylic dry-brushing for highlights).
The advantage is both speed..(just pick a color and take the cap off.)
and control. Inks are nice, but mine seemed to have a mind of their own..
and want to go places I don't want them to. Brush markers don't.
Search 'Kuretake Zig', ''Prang' and ''Pitt Artist' if interested..
Jim
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'Brush marker'? What mysterious thing is this? Please expand.
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I'm intrigued. I know the product but no, never used them. Have you got some example figs to show?
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Bump :)
I'm interested in this.
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Okay.. a very quick-and-dirty intro..
1. "Markers" have different inks.
PERMANENT markers have an alchohol-based ink.
Pitt Artist markers have India Ink (only one I know of that does)
(others have water-based, so you have to look..)
These inks are (somewhat) translucent, so they need a white primer.
The alchohol-based inks will also 'melt' a previous coat of an
alchohol-based.. sooo.. you can put AB onto India.. or
India onto anything..
Fabrico also makes excellent markers with a built-in brush.
being designed for fabrics, the ink is a bit denser and
less translucent.
2. Markers all have a shaped felt feeder, but have different points.
The Sharpie and Bic brands have dynamite colors but a non-useful
blunt point, so these feeders need replacement with a 'brush-shaped' feeder (I recommend Marvy Le Plume II points. Le Plumes are water-based, so you need to pull the point, soak out the watercolor, and let dry). The Pitts have a very nice brush point already..
Note: you can also carve a "pen-point" on the Sharpies and Bics..
think a triangular shape like a fountain pen..
3. Advantages & Disadvantages:
- cheap and available
- very fast painting, no mixing
- with a Pitt or Le Plume point, you can be VERY exact with where
the color goes. For example, doing the red stripe on the blue trousers
of British Colonials is a cinch. A thin red line, then edge it with blue,
then do the rest of the pants.
- dry-brushing with acrylics is 'as normal' if desired.
The major disadvantages are:
- the points tend to get chewed up on 'rough' metal, getting fuzzy
on the end.. for example, a wolfskin coat is better done with
acrylic and a brush..
- The point is not reallt suited to super-fine work, such as doing eyes..
though you can dot raised buttons with ease.
My recommendation is to pick up some Pitt Artist markers as a start..
if you like the, you'll like the rest..:-)
Jim
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I remember seeing an advert in Military Modelling years ago for Tamiya paint markers, I assume its a similar thing?
Never tried it myself, but I would be interested in seeing your results if you have pictures. :)