I love using the vallejo paint range. PanthermanI threw out my entire stock of Vallejo paints and purchased Tamiya's entire line of X and XF paint. That's what I use exclusively
Vallejo primers cover and adhere very well on clean plastic. Vallejo paints are intended to be used with an undercoat of one of their primers.For the base coat, I normally use Tamiya or Mr. Aqueous, because they cover well and adhere to the surface. After that, I use almost whatever paint gets the job done and is the colour I have in mind. I have given up spraying Vallejo, Mig etc. over bare plastic because they just don't like that, and — in addition to ditching lacquers as I mentioned above — I don't buy any Hataka acrylics anymore because they really don't want to cover worth a damn.
I'd say adhesion is relative. In my experience, Vallejo adheres adequately on areas that are never going to be handled or masked. It still sits on the plastic and doesn't have the chemical burn-in of a lacquer.Vallejo primers cover and adhere very well on clean plastic. Vallejo paints are intended to be used with an undercoat of one of their primers.
As they say: The poison is in the dose". I don't use lacquer paint as after shave, but am fairly comfortable spraying a few ml per day in an exterior vented Pace hood. As you said in another thread, we are exposed to all kinds of things in our daily lives. This is not the one I'm particularly worried about.Now if you want to use, and expose yourself to, such nasty chemicals, that's your business. Personally, I prefer to use 90% isopropyl alcohol and a drop or two of Tamiya retarder when using Tamiya paints. (I don't use Gunze for a variety of reasons.)
That is my experience with their spraying cans of primer, but not with the airbrushable type. That could be wiped straight off a model even after drying for 24 hours.Vallejo primers cover and adhere very well on clean plastic.
That's not a misconception I've yet encountered — what I have seen quite frequently is people thinking that Tamiya X- and XF-series (and Mr. Aqueous, but mainly Tamiya) acrylics are water-based because they can be thinned with water. They also think of Mr. Hobby (and Tamiya LP-series) as "lacquer paint" but not as alcohol-based, in my experience.Many people, knowing that Tamiya and Gunze paints use alcohol as a primary solvent, think of them as lacquers.
Huh! My experience with their airbrushable primers is exactly the opposite of yours. Go figure. Maybe you weren't "holding your mouth right?"That is my experience with their spraying cans of primer, but not with the airbrushable type. That could be wiped straight off a model even after drying for 24 hours.
I have always used vallejo primers and after 3 years of building have never had a problem with it. PanthermanA few years ago, someone I know who had recently bought an airbrush for priming his wargames figures, asked me if Vallejo primer really was as bad as it seemed. He complained he could wipe it off the metal and resin figures days later. I had never used it so I didn't know, but he brought his bottle of it over and we gave it a try through my airbrush, both onto some unpainted plastic and on the underside of a model that already had a layer of (IIRC) Mr. Aqueous acrylics on it. This confirmed what he had found: it just didn't stick, which makes it useless as a primer, IMHO.
Vallejo and patience.Guess the primer and finish coat:
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+ Single color with no masking and minimal handling. Of course it works. It just has some quirks many of us prefer to avoid.Vallejo and patience.
Correction: lots of handling to get the decals on (old Hasegawa, decals not in the best of shape) and to attach it to its stand.+ Single color with no masking and minimal handling. Of course it works. It just has some quirks many of us prefer to avoid.