Edbert
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2024
- Messages
- 893
So my kit says to use "AS-19", but I've not used a spray-can on a model since I hit puberty in the 1970s!
I purchased (I am 100% new to using "acrylics") two bottles, one each of XF-17 and XF-8.
The 17 looks super-dark in the bottle, and the 8 looks way too bright, to my uneducated eyes.
Is there a formula for mixing these? It might need some white or light tan, maybe even something to remove a bit of green, that I think I see.
Do any of you know a way to make XF-17 more appropriate for a WWII Corsair? Or is the Tamiya XF-17 correct out of the bottle? I have noticed, in my 1-hour of experience with acrylic model paint (LOL) that the final color dried much lighter than when wet.
Am I thinking XF-17 is too dark because I'm a noob and overreacting?
Edit: the Corsair I am building is an F4U-1. Not the "birdcage" or the A/B/C, this is the 1943 version which I think (zero expertise) was a bit lighter and flatter than late WWII or Korean versions.
I purchased (I am 100% new to using "acrylics") two bottles, one each of XF-17 and XF-8.
The 17 looks super-dark in the bottle, and the 8 looks way too bright, to my uneducated eyes.
Is there a formula for mixing these? It might need some white or light tan, maybe even something to remove a bit of green, that I think I see.
Do any of you know a way to make XF-17 more appropriate for a WWII Corsair? Or is the Tamiya XF-17 correct out of the bottle? I have noticed, in my 1-hour of experience with acrylic model paint (LOL) that the final color dried much lighter than when wet.
Am I thinking XF-17 is too dark because I'm a noob and overreacting?
Edit: the Corsair I am building is an F4U-1. Not the "birdcage" or the A/B/C, this is the 1943 version which I think (zero expertise) was a bit lighter and flatter than late WWII or Korean versions.
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