Hello all. With my degree 99.9% finished and quarantine, I've finally got around to starting to use my airbrush properly (I.E other than priming). And I'm having some good results on larger pieces. However, I'm struggling with a few bits that I hope I might get some advice on:
1. How do you more advanced airbrush artists manage gradients on small figures? My blends on a tank are pretty good and smooth, but as soon I transition to a small piece I find that, despite a 0.2 nozzle I just can't get pinstripe lines. I've tried a low pressure, milk-consistency paint and I ALWAYS clean my airbrush out thoroughly after each session - but even controlling the air/paint flow as fine as possible I vastly overshoot for such fine work. Am I just deluding myself that I can use an airbrush for such fine work, and need to go back to the brush?
2. Leading on from this; White - how the hell do you blend white at this scale? It's a speckling nightmare. High pressure, low pressure, clean airbrush, thinned just right - none of it seems to give me a smooth blend, even over a light grey. I've read around on various sites, but I feel I'm still missing some magic trick... (
Btw, I thin it to milk consistency using a 1:3 mix of Vallejo Thinner:Water)
3. For reference, a dude - I was going for a pale bluey white, but in the end I just could not get the folds of his chiton to blend nicely. So I resorted to a wash, a zenithal highlght and some brush strokes along the folds. However, while it's a passable gaming standard, it's far too grainy for display quality. Any advice from experienced airbrushers on how you would have approached this?