I think you did well on the red armour, however, you should have used your airbrush to form a gradient effect for the green. You can tighten the spread of an airbrush by removing the first bolt on the nozzle. To throttle, you should pinch the needle or do it before removing the bolt. From there, you form the affect and spray it onto the back of the idea to make the affect real and seamless. Just offering some of my advice. He still looks very good!
Thanks for the advice, had to look up some terms and such to understand but I'll experiment with that and see if I can use it. But as for this project I didn't want to risk making a mistake so I went with the brush since it was a guarantee I could do it right.
@@joyfulpainting700 I can understand not wanting to ruin an expensive model. That’s fine. In that case I recommend you practice a bit on other minis. Airbrush skill really pays for itself!
Looks amazing
Thanks!
He looks awesome dude!
Thanks! Glad you think so.
I think you did well on the red armour, however, you should have used your airbrush to form a gradient effect for the green. You can tighten the spread of an airbrush by removing the first bolt on the nozzle. To throttle, you should pinch the needle or do it before removing the bolt. From there, you form the affect and spray it onto the back of the idea to make the affect real and seamless.
Just offering some of my advice. He still looks very good!
Thanks for the advice, had to look up some terms and such to understand but I'll experiment with that and see if I can use it.
But as for this project I didn't want to risk making a mistake so I went with the brush since it was a guarantee I could do it right.
@@joyfulpainting700 I can understand not wanting to ruin an expensive model. That’s fine. In that case I recommend you practice a bit on other minis. Airbrush skill really pays for itself!
I think you did great. 7.5
Thanks!
you did well, but why so much crying