Welcome to the Strelets Forum.
Please feel free to discuss any aspect of 1/72 scale plastic figures, not simply Strelets.
If you have any questions about our products then we will answer them here.
I recently used some of the Army Paintr Speedpaints on some Mycenaean Spearmen, and some cyclops. I'm sold. I used the Peachy Flesh over a white undercoat and I think it looks great. I don't even feel the need to muck about with it further - apart from some tattoos for the 'clopses.
With regard to washes - I'm writing this in the bath, does that count? I use mainly Games Workshop, because I know them. But I also use a home-made 'dirty' wash. 50/50 black and chestnut ink, mixed into 10x the amount of matt medium, some water and a couple of drops of odourless washing up liquid.
I use this for horses, buildings, armour, armoured vehicles, pretty much everything, it's cheap and it works.
Steve, I'm not that impressed with the Citadel contrast paints but, as you write, the AP ones show promise.
I think I now spend more on paint, brushes etc than I do on figures.
donald
Loved the witty subject line Donald and further fun that it generated. A hearty laugh over a morning coffee!
I have nothing on you mob with your fancy army painters and washes!#.
I have two minor points that may be of use (interest). Likely not, but oh well!:grinning:
1. A tip that I was many years ago is to thin paint with de-ionised (DI)/distilled water rather than tap water.
I'm not too fussed during painting, but always use DI water to thin the stock of paint.
Like Roger, perhaps more so in our warmer location, washing brushes is a regular requirement for me. I simply use my wash jar of tap water (plus a little dissolved paint residue, depending on when last changed!). A drop or two off the washed brush serves to thin the paint in my 'palette' as and when required.
2. A decant a little paint at a time into a 'palette'
A tub/bottle of paint goes a long way when painting these small figures so I shake (and stir if in a tub rather than a bottle) before putting a few drops from the stirrer (usually the 'handle' of a worn paintbrush) into a well of one of my 'palettes'. These are simply used pill blister packs, which I have acquired in the hundreds over the years of saving from family and friends. I cannot paint quickly enough to use them!
Anyway, thanks again for the hearty laugh and interesting insights on a hump day morning,
James
#I'm happily stuck well and truly in the 80s and 90s with black undercoat (Payne's Grey), base coat of main colours, black acrylic ink wash (with a drop of Pledge One Go added to increase viscosity) and then highlight/dry brush.