Painting tips required for Airfix Kits

Painting tips required for Airfix Kits

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BeastieBoy73

Original Poster:

651 posts

113 months

Thursday 5th May 2016
quotequote all
Hi

Please be gentle with me as I need to ask you pros one of possibly the most basic of questions when it comes to painting an Airfix kit.

I recieved a beginners Airfix Spitfire model kit (complete with paints) thanks to my works Secret Santa.

I haven't built a model kit since I was a child (approx 30-40 years ago) but was thilled with the gift and really enjoyed the build.

I have since build a few more since Christmas and am looking to build something a little more challenging in the next few months.

I have just picked up an unbuilt 1980s Harley Davidson kit from a local charity shop that I hope will fit the bill.

Given the kit is a few years old, I'm staggered by the quality of it especially when compared to a new Revel 911 I recently built. That kit fought me all the way...

Anyway, back to my question. With each of the kits I've built I have always started by painting the parts while they are still on the sprues.

This made sense to me as the sprues are easy to hold without painting my fingers and thumbs plus the painted parts didn't stick to whatever they were resting on while they dried.

Once I was happy with the parts I'd painted, I removed them from the sprues and glued them together as the instructions insisted. I would then return to touch up any areas I had cut from the sprues and/or had filed/sanded.

Is this how you pros paint your kits or do you remove all the parts from the sprues, file/prep them and then paint them? Or, do you paint the kit once it is built.

Apologies if this seems a real basis question but I have really been bitten by the modelling bug (after the Harley, a Renault 4 Van with Krafwerk "Tour De France" livery, me thinks... I can do the artwork, but I suspect I will be back for decal printing tips at some point) and I want to undo any bad habits I may have picked up already.

Thanks in advance.

BeastieBoy73

Original Poster:

651 posts

113 months

Thursday 5th May 2016
quotequote all
Thank you both so much for the tips, it hugely appreciated. Very true what you said about the tiny parts on the Airfix kits, the red arrow nose section snapped whilst removing it from the spree and when I showed my wife the tiny U shaped towing clamps that were to be fitted to the front of a tank, she said she'd seen bigger fluff...

I'm not quite ready to invest in an airbrush kit (though Father's Day is coming up...) but I'd not considered filling the joins on the parts. Looking at the kits I have built, they could all use a spot of filler, especially before I'd applied any paint.

Thanks also for adding the link, I will read on with interest.

BeastieBoy73

Original Poster:

651 posts

113 months

Thursday 5th May 2016
quotequote all
Thanks again to you all for the additional tips... I work near a Maplins so can pop in and pick up some side cutters. Also near a Halfords to for primer. I tried some flat orange graffiti spray paint from halfords (brand escapes me) on the Revell 911 kit as a kind of Singer Tribute. Dried quite well.

I've just check out the Harley kit I picked up at the charity shop and it's by IMAI. Not a company I've heard of but the quality of the moulding and chrome looks excellent. The Revell 911 chrome parts you could barely work out. I've looked online and they seem to have built a lot of Thunderbirds TV show kits.