G
griffrat
Guest
Hi all from the great Kansas City area!!
I have been painting 15-28mm toy soldiers (Games Workshop, Reaper, Demonworld etc..) since the late 1980s. With that in mind I am what some people would consider an above average painter. And this brings me to this post in a new forum...an airbrush forum.
I am looking at getting a "standard" air compressor to air up tires and drive nail guns and such. Out side of this what other things should I consider for the compressor?
When looking at an airbrush I am fundamentally looking at shading from base coat to the first true shading. I see a lot of airbrushes as listed having "hairline" as a description for the width of a line. Please excuse my ignorance, but is this true, the width of a hair? What are some of the more fundamental things for a "decent" airbrush as far as reliability and quality. I know that there are name brands out there, but I don't really care about name brands I am more concerned with the end results....pretty toy models.
Thanks!!
I have been painting 15-28mm toy soldiers (Games Workshop, Reaper, Demonworld etc..) since the late 1980s. With that in mind I am what some people would consider an above average painter. And this brings me to this post in a new forum...an airbrush forum.
I am looking at getting a "standard" air compressor to air up tires and drive nail guns and such. Out side of this what other things should I consider for the compressor?
When looking at an airbrush I am fundamentally looking at shading from base coat to the first true shading. I see a lot of airbrushes as listed having "hairline" as a description for the width of a line. Please excuse my ignorance, but is this true, the width of a hair? What are some of the more fundamental things for a "decent" airbrush as far as reliability and quality. I know that there are name brands out there, but I don't really care about name brands I am more concerned with the end results....pretty toy models.
Thanks!!