Members jayjay Posted May 3, 2012 Members Report Posted May 3, 2012 Thats good to know since I was planning to dye a tool bag all black tonight them run the acrylic over it, you saved me a step. The Stipple brush was the short rigid brush? The gal in the GW store said they use it simulate rust. Can't wait until I get home tonight. I'll post the wallet I made when I get home tonight, its still in the camera. Glad they worked out for you, they have an amazing color selection and their metals and metallics are sweet. I experimented a bit this weekend and found that the base colors will also go over black easily, the layer colors do not. I also love how they work like automotive paints where they go on flat & dull and literally pop when a clear coat is put over them. I'll post a pic of my latest which is using two base reds in layers with satin sheen in between to get a rusted/worn effect using the GW stipple brush. Quote
Members jayjay Posted May 4, 2012 Members Report Posted May 4, 2012 Here is the wallet I used with the Cidital paints I have a custom bib on the bench right now that the client asked the color being applied match the color of his bike. Described by him as "Hot Rod Yellow", I was trying multiple brands and such to either buy or custom mix it myself without 100% success. So, being the persistent guy I am, I started thinking of where I could find an array of colors not normally found at the standard art store. As luck would have it, I remembered being in game stores in the past and all of the younger folks playing RPG board games like Warhammer 40k and how brilliantly some of them had painted their army models. So I stopped by my local Games Workshop and lo and behold, there were two racks one for Citadel paints and one for Games Workshop paints. The GW stand had 145 colors and the Citadel had another 50 or so. You have to smile at paint color names like, "Rotting Flesh", "Blood Red", "Fiery Orange" and "Lich Purple". There are a couple of other brands as well available elsewhere. Oh, something else to note, each company has a range of 3-6 flesh tones that are very nice and can be blended to create even more variations. here's a link to the Games Workshop website, I'm sure they are available elsewhere like Amazon and such: http://www.games-workshop.com Another good brand from what I was told at the game store is Reaper Master Series. Here is a link to a store with the complete color list with swatches: http://www.ccgarmory.com/remasepa.html And for those curious few, here is a progress pic of the piece that initiated the search... Cheers, Chris Quote
Members Spinner Posted May 4, 2012 Author Members Report Posted May 4, 2012 Here is the wallet I used with the Cidital paints Cool deal, looks like the GW:Cs did the trick. Here is the fender bib I am working on, the pic isn't great but this angle shows some of the color detail. It shows up really nicely in person, in pics not so much. Quote Chris Three Mutts Customs Leather - http://www.threemuttscustoms.com
Members jayjay Posted May 9, 2012 Members Report Posted May 9, 2012 That looks great. how did you create the background is looks great. Cool deal, looks like the GW:Cs did the trick. Here is the fender bib I am working on, the pic isn't great but this angle shows some of the color detail. It shows up really nicely in person, in pics not so much. Quote
Members Spinner Posted May 9, 2012 Author Members Report Posted May 9, 2012 That looks great. how did you create the background is looks great. Thanks, the background is a technique I call "Pebble Chaos". It's a style I use for very large open areas where the client wants "something different" than just flat smooth leather. I picked up about 10 of the PA004 and 1 each of the PA003 and PA005 pebbler tools from Springfield Leather and ground 8 of the PA004s into various shapes. From there I start with the edges and stamp along the border in varying spacing and grouping. Once the outer border is done, I then tool around the lettering in the same way. Once I have the borders & edges done I switch back and forth between the 004 and 005 just knocking them in at random intervals making sure to rotate the tool 90-180 degrees from the last impression. Once I have a healthy field of random spots in the middle, I then go through and fill & connect the remaining areas using the various shapes to create the chaotic honeycomb look. The trick is to keep the raised 'walls' from looking like there is a pattern to their layout while making sure no one section is too filled in or too unfilled as the lines can get too thick or you can get large backgrounded patches, both of which will throw off the balance & look. Folks really like the look and feel and more than once someone has asked a client if it was an exotic hide...pretty funny & cool at the same time. Here are a couple of others I did using it: Quote Chris Three Mutts Customs Leather - http://www.threemuttscustoms.com
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.