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Made in us
Stinky Spore





I've searched the internet far and wide. Other than obvious stuff like closing the lid, the only two tips I could find to keep paint pots from drying out is:

a. Add a drop of distilled water occasionally to the pot and mix

b. Store the pots upside down on occasion

Can someone either confirm/deny or "add to" this list? Possibly even point me in a direction where there is more info.


 
   
Made in us
Drakhun





Eaton Rapids, MI

Pots are notoriously bad for drying out.

Keeping the rim clean so that the tops can seal will go a long way to help keeping your paints from drying out.

Adding a medium such as water can help.

Personally the best thing i did was moved all of the paints from pots over to dropper bottles. It cost me about $0.15 per and I haven't regretted it.

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Made in us
Dakka Veteran





I really should take this opportunity to point out something GW has possibly fixed.

A little while ago, I decided to try the new GW paintline and picked up several. I was really annoyed that when you opened the pots, they didn't even click to stay open. What an annoyance to me.

Anyway, I was caught short and grabbed several of these pots again recently at my local store. The store owner had purchased one of the new 200+ paint sets to restock.

What a change! The lids click open and the strap that connects the lid to the bottle is slightly longer then it was. When you remove the lid it almost feels like a cork your pulling out/pushing in. You really need to click the front and back of the lid in to close it. It feels really secure. What a change!




 
   
Made in nz
Longtime Dakkanaut





United Kingdom

I've found using a wet pallette really helps, and is the single greatest piece of painting advice I have ever been given, being able to keep a small amount of paint usuable outside of the pot for a very long time is priceless. It helps keep the paints inside the pot from drying out because you are not opening the pots as often, plus you get more mileage out of your pots, as your waste is cut to a minimum.

   
Made in us
Gargantuan Gargant





Binghamton, NY

Storing pots upside down does actually help, but only for long-term storage. It puts paint right up against any potential gaps in the seal, which causes them to start drying immediately - there's a little wastage, this way, but it effectively seals off the pot, preventing further thickening due to evaporation. If you're only storing for a few days, what you lose in crust is more significant than any thickening of the general contents, but when you're talking months, I'd say it's well worth it.

Personally, I just add a few drops of water (plain old tap water - unless you have very hard water and add a significant amount, it's not going to mess with your paints) every now and again, if the contents of a pot are thickening noticeably. This is simply to keep it from gelling, as I use a (wet) palette and thin to the task at hand while painting. Thinning an entire pot is very limiting, if not outright wasteful (should you muck things up) - best to leave it as an emergency measure, not a standard practice.

The Dreadnote wrote:But the Emperor already has a shrine, in the form of your local Games Workshop. You honour him by sacrificing your money to the plastic effigies of his warriors. In time, your devotion will be rewarded with the gift of having even more effigies to worship.
 
   
 
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