Saturday, September 5, 2015

4th Kit - Oreimo, Kuroneko and Kirino

After the third figure, I was feeling pretty bummed out. I mean, I had spent so much time creating something which turned out fugly. The fact that I knew, or suspected, that it would turn out fugly before I even started didn't make me feel any better. I needed something to cheer me up - a figure which I knew I would enjoy painting. So I chose this kit, simply because it had Kuroneko, and I love Kuroneko. It was also very simple, which just meant quicker gratification, and it was from e2046, which meant the quality was pretty good. All in all, it was going to be a breeze compared to the last one.

Or so I thought.


I had been growing weary of using regular spray paints for my figures. The last figure only emphasized what I already knew from the first figure, which was that normal spray paints (from Home Depot) spewed out inconsistent globs of paint, which meant that I'd end up with part of the piece being saturated and about to run, and another part would be not completely covered. This meant more layers, which hides the details and the lines in the cast. For me, the fewer layers of paint, the better. So to do this, I consulted Google, and ended up buying some Tamiya spray paints. I ended up liking the even and fine spray, but Tamiya paint had it's own problems.


Lesson 12: Tamiya paints need a solid base coat.


Having a base coat isn't something new, but using Home Depot sprays, I never had to actually use a base coat because the paints always stuck to the PVC. However, I quickly found that Tamiya paints would not. I thought that I could spray a quick bottom coat, and then spray a thicker coat on top of that, but it turns out, not really. When I did that, the top coat ended up very uneven, and in one spot, the spray paint still wouldn't stick, like oil and water. It's likely that the figure had some oil or solvent on it from the casting process, and that washing it off would fix the problem. I'm too lazy, so for this figure, I just applied more and more layers till it was covered. It was a huge pain, and next time, I decided, I'd just use a base coat, because I'm still too lazy to wash it.


In the second figure, Holo, I had used a regular Home Depot clear spray coat for the finish. It worked fine, but it still felt like the coat was uneven, like some areas got globs while some were thin. So I decided to upgrade my spray paints to Montana brand - I purchased an acid-free varnish spray made from an acrylic base. I paint acrylic, so I wasn't worried about it. I should have been.

Lesson 13: Don't use Montana Varnish


It's an acrylic based spray, from a very reputable, high quality brand so I wasn't concerned at all. Well guess what, everything I sprayed turned white. Not just a little white, really really white. Actually sometimes it was just a little white - so I thought that it depended on how thick the layer was, so I did some with really thin layers. Nope, still white. But then some colors didn't change color at all.... so I'm not sure what the connection is. All I really know is that I can never use it again. Waste of money.


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