Thanks Milan. I’ve always had difficulty in painting horses but since watching this video I see what I do wrong and that your method is much simpler yet very effective.
Thank you Milan for sharing your work ! This is very inspiring to me I would have 2 short questions : Why do you use alcohol instead of the dedicated Vallejo thinner ? Do you use the same flat brush for painting and blending ?
@Jon Oz Thank you for your answer Yes you are right, the recipe does not necessarily work for all painters, but it is good to be guided and then to experiment. Anyway, they are figurines, it doesn't matter! I hesitate to use Windex or equivalent because there is often ammonia which is quite harmful for the metal of the airbrush and ... the painter. For now, I'm using Vallejo thinner and a bit of flow improver. It's okay. One of these days, I'll try isopropyl alcohol anyway, because it's actually a lot cheaper. By the way, do you use it directly or diluted with water (I read 70% for example) ?
I use window cleaner because is cheaper :o). Isopropyl alcohol is for Tamiya colours and I don´t diluted it. The flat brush is for painting and blending at the same time but only in this case...painting the horse head.
I actually have a third question for you: I can see that you are not protecting the base: is it just a tool or are you going to repaint it at the end of the job ?
Thanks Milan. I’ve always had difficulty in painting horses but since watching this video I see what I do wrong and that your method is much simpler yet very effective.
Hello, I am glad you like my painting technique. It is a really quick and easy technique.
Prostě nádhera. Líbí se mi když děláš větší objekty. Všechno na nich krásně vynikne.
Díky moc, Peťo. Taky mám raději větší objekty...na ty prcky už moc nevidím... 😀
Your work amazes me more and more each time I watch your videos. I look forward to the next episode
Thank you very much. I appreciate it.
Learned a lot….again!
Thank you.
Lovely work.
Thank you.
Beautiful work, as always. Thank You
Thank you very much.
Thank you Milan for sharing your work !
This is very inspiring to me
I would have 2 short questions :
Why do you use alcohol instead of the dedicated Vallejo thinner ?
Do you use the same flat brush for painting and blending ?
@Jon Oz Thank you for your answer
Yes you are right, the recipe does not necessarily work for all painters, but it is good to be guided and then to experiment. Anyway, they are figurines, it doesn't matter!
I hesitate to use Windex or equivalent because there is often ammonia which is quite harmful for the metal of the airbrush and ... the painter.
For now, I'm using Vallejo thinner and a bit of flow improver. It's okay.
One of these days, I'll try isopropyl alcohol anyway, because it's actually a lot cheaper.
By the way, do you use it directly or diluted with water (I read 70% for example) ?
I use window cleaner because is cheaper :o).
Isopropyl alcohol is for Tamiya colours and I don´t diluted it.
The flat brush is for painting and blending at the same time but only in this case...painting the horse head.
@@milandufek8151 That is what I thought I saw on the video. Thks for the clarification 🙂
Milan.....fantástico.....
Thank you very much Jose.
this is inspirational indeed.
Thank you.
Milan , what are you using as your thinner for your airbrush ?
The thinner is window cleaner. It contains an alcohol.
@@milandufek8151 Cheers ,I use the same here for airbrushing.
I actually have a third question for you: I can see that you are not protecting the base: is it just a tool or are you going to repaint it at the end of the job ?
This is what I thought also
At the end I paint the wooden plint with black colour. 2-3 layers.
@@milandufek8151 makes sense now ! thanks Milan
Awesome! Do you use any varnish after finishing painting?
Thank you. I don´t use varnish. The surface of the horse fur is not matt and not gloss. Thanks oils, it looks reall.
Aren't oil pants toxic?
No, they are not. I don't eat paints, I don't put a brush in my mouth and I don't even put thinner in my mouth.