A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other kitchen
items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try this out but
can't remember to save my life the name of the article or issue. I've tried
searching the FSM site but salt doesn't find anything. Does anyone remeber
this or am I cracking up finally?
HELP!!
Frank
Rufus - 15 Feb 2009 02:27 GMT
> A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other kitchen
> items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try this out but
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Frank
No - your mind is sound. I remember the article, and even clipped
it...only God knows what I did with it, though...
...as I recall, the technique is pretty straightforward - paint a silver
base coat on your model, then make a slurry of moist salt as a
mask...not so damp as to allow the grain to melt, just enough to make it
stick/clump together...apply the salt paste in areas where you want
chipping to be and spray your color coat on while the salt is still wet.
Then once everything is dry, chip away the salt.
Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
acrylics, though. If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
...ahh...after I've typed all that, a search of the FSM site reveals the
article was a feature in the July 2003 issue - "Fast and easy paint
wear", by Brian Barton. As an "FSM Finishing School" article.
http://www.finescale.com/fsm/default.aspx?c=i&id=150

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- Rufus
Enzo Matrix - 15 Feb 2009 16:52 GMT
> Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
> acrylics, though. If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
Acrylics work fine with this technique. However, Alclad is adversely
affected by the salt. Not to worry though. A coat of Future solves the
problem.

Signature
Enzo
I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.
Rufus - 15 Feb 2009 18:36 GMT
>> Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
>> acrylics, though. If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
>
> Acrylics work fine with this technique. However, Alclad is adversely
> affected by the salt. Not to worry though. A coat of Future solves the
> problem.
I wondered about that - salt on the metallic paint. Wonder of sugar or
baking soda would work just as well?..

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- Rufus
TankBuilder2@yahoo.ca - 17 Feb 2009 17:13 GMT
> >> Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
> >> acrylics, though. If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
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> --
> - Rufus
Hi there. I think that the salt crystals are harder and bigger. (?) I
think the sugar and the baking soda would disolve. The baking soda wll
probably be like a paste.
Cheers from Peter
You could always try them and see. I'd practice on a scrap model
though.
Rufus - 17 Feb 2009 17:55 GMT
>>>> Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
>>>> acrylics, though. If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> You could always try them and see. I'd practice on a scrap model
> though.
I've used baking soda to simulate non-skid on walkways - paint the
walkway and sprinkle it into the wet paint, then spray another coat.
It looks really great, but it doesn't seem to last...a year or two at
best. It turns whitish and then starts to chip off. Just noticed that
again on a 1/32 Tomcat I'd already repaired once as I was dusting it
last night.

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- Rufus
someone@some.domain - 18 Feb 2009 02:06 GMT
>> >> Not sure, but I think you might have to use enamels...might work with
>> >> acrylics, though. =A0If salt/water doesn't "poison" them.
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>You could always try them and see. I'd practice on a scrap model
>though.
kosher salt is really good. it's tough and very uneven.
Val Kraut - 15 Feb 2009 06:01 GMT
You're not cracking up - I also remeber the article - seem to remember you
used wet salt as a mask then sprayed and later washed off the salt and paint
on it to do weathering - I'll look at my stack to try to find it.
Val Kraut
Gray Ghost - 15 Feb 2009 18:30 GMT
> A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other
> kitchen items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Frank
Thanks guys, so far. I can't find my July 2003 issue, yet. Wasn't there a
comparison of different types of items to use, salt, sugar, artificial
sweetners? Each seemed to have a different effect, some better than others.
Frank
OldSchool - 17 Feb 2009 17:36 GMT
On Feb 15, 1:30 pm, grey_ghost471-newsgro...@yahoo.com (Gray Ghost)
wrote:
> > A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other
> > kitchen items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> Frank
you might find this of some use as well:
http://www.swannysmodels.com/Salting.html
jim - 18 Feb 2009 23:50 GMT
On Feb 14, 9:54 pm, grey_ghost471-newsgro...@yahoo.com (Gray Ghost)
wrote:
> A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other kitchen
> items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try this out but
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Frank
the article was in the November 08 issue in the Bonus Weathering
Handbook. Add Salt and Batter your models. What they used that worked
was course salt, sugar, spenda, sweet n low, and equal. the paint was
Tamiya.
Gray Ghost - 22 Feb 2009 03:49 GMT
> On Feb 14, 9:54 pm, grey_ghost471-newsgro...@yahoo.com (Gray Ghost)
> wrote:
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> was course salt, sugar, spenda, sweet n low, and equal. the paint was
> Tamiya.
Yes indeed, found it this afternoon while doing some cleaning. Thanks all!
Frank
Gray Ghost - 22 Feb 2009 03:47 GMT
> A while ago FSM had an article about weathering using salt and other
> kitchen items under paint to simulate chipping and wear. I want to try
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Frank
Glory Be! November 2008! It was in an insert called Weathering Handbook or
some such. Thanks all.
Frank