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Made in us
Member of the Ethereal Council






So i paint out of the pot, But i think its time for me to graduate from that and paint from a pallette.
But my biggest fear is two things
1:Using you paints that i dont need much off(like lets say, i need white for lenses.
2: Not getting enoug paint on my brush.
But i was thinking of getting a wet pallette
Specificallly The PP one, Does that work with GW paints?

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Made in au
[MOD]
Making Stuff






Under the couch

A wet palette is a wet palette. They'll work with any acrylic paints.

Much cheaper to just make one instead of buying one, though. I use a plastic container (find one with a good seal) with a thick layer of folded paper towel in the bottom. Wet the paper, squeeze out the excess water, and then lay a sheet of waxed baking paper on top. Pop the lid on when not in use, and clean out and replace everything if it starts to smell or grow new and interesting forms of life.

 
   
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Fixture of Dakka






As Insaniak says there are better cheaper ways to make a wet pallete. I prefer to use a cheap sponge and cover it with parchment paper vice wax paper. I actually prefer to use porcelain pallets for the most part.

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Utilizing Careful Highlighting





Manila, Philippines

Yeah, definitely just make one. I'm pretty sure you have the stuff you need to make one.


 
   
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And how long can i expect to keep the paint there?
Also, what is the advantage of painting with a pallette?

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Made in ph
Utilizing Careful Highlighting





Manila, Philippines

It's good for mixing paint, of course! Mostly the advantage of a wet palette over a normal palette is that you can keep the paints useful for a long time. Very handy when painting something with a custom mix of paint on your part, but not enough to warrant their own separate bottle (i.e. you mixed 25:75 ratio of bleached bone and scorpion green for the eyes of your SM force, and you want it to be consistent). And miniature paint dries faster than the usual acrylics I use, and with such minute amounts they'll dry quick and fast before I can even paint them on the model without using a wet palette.


 
   
Made in ca
Hardened Veteran Guardsman




Canada

My wet pallet consists of 1, food grade parchment paper 2, wet napkin (don't soak it too much) 3, plastic backing to keep the water from soaking anything below. Paint never dries out on me.

You can also use bottle caps as cheap disposable pallets.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/06/16 05:31:37


 
   
Made in au
Devestating Grey Knight Dreadknight





Australia

If you're painting straight out of the pot (STOP IT RIGHT NOW!) then first try graduating up to a 'regular' palette.

Basically, using a palette gives you two advantages. It allows you to thin your paints without having to thin the entire bottle (never do this, you'll ruin the entire pot) and it allows you to quickly and easily mix custom colours. Further, you can add other elements to your paints (water, blending medium, Isopropyl Alcohol) in order to make your own washes or glazes, but we're getting into advanced territory there.

A wet palette has a wet piece of paper in the palette to keep the paint wet. This automatically thins your paints for you, and allows you to work with them for longer before they dry out. This can be a real issue when you have a few models, and you want to use a specially mixed colour on them all. Mixed colours are very hard to replicate exactly, so you don't want to be mixing a new batch for each model.

This article might help:

http://handcannononline.com/blog/2012/06/15/a-beginners-guide-to-wet-palates-build-your-own/

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Gargantuan Gargant





Binghamton, NY

Kaldor wrote:This automatically thins your paints for you...
I think this statement can be misleading. Some people like to drag their brush around the palette after loading it with paint, collecting the surrounding moisture to thin their paints, brushload by brushload. Leaving paints (sealed in the palette) for an extended time with plenty of water in the reservoir will also dilute them. Just laying them down on the palette does not thin them, at least not to a sufficient and/or consistent degree. The main purpose of a wet palette is to maintain the paint's consistency, not to change it. I don't suggest anyone start using one expecting it to be an "auto-thin" button.

I also don't think that it's necessary to start on a plain plastic/ceramic palette before "graduating" to a wet palette. Thinning paints is a skill that takes practice, regardless of what it's sitting on. I guess combating evaporation on a traditional palette would give you more practice, since it requires constant upkeep, but it is equally likely to waste paint and cause frustration. I was struggling with proper paint consistency for a while and upgrading to a DIY wet palette made things "click" much faster - turns out what was holding me back most was the constant battle with evaporation (especially harsh, considering I'm a slow painter, by nature, whose workspace was in a rather hot room). If you start with a wet palette and stick with it, you're likely to hit the "end goal" sooner, since you're learning and practicing under what will be your usual painting conditions.

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