A good clarification for folk new to mediums. Thanks Adam. One of my favorite mediums is actually contrast medium, and not for thinning contrast paints, just as a medium to thin paints for glazing and such. Something else I’ve found is that using air brush thinner to thin metallic paints works well, as opposed to using water.
I use Winsor and Newton artists' Acrylic Flow Improver. A 75ml bottle doesn't cost much and last me years! Acrylic medium also comes in large quantities for artist use, which usually works out a lot cheaper than small pots of branded miniature paint.
WN is a really nice (if a little pricy in some instances) art brand and has a lot of great crossover with mini painting brands. Another good one is Golden. I use a lot of Golden paints and additives and they’re high quality and fantastic.
I’m glad you made this video because is hard to find one place to do an amazing overview. As you said before sometimes youtubers assume that the viewer has some knowledge of what they are talking about. That said I’ve used alcohol as a thinner because I used Tamiya Paints and they are alcohol based acrylic paints.
As someone trying to get into wargame, I would love to see a how to play one page rules video. Maybe even a battle report, but with pauses to explain how the game is being played. Love your videos, man!
This video brought me back to 1992 when I went to college for art school. Great review for those that want to learn or to someone getting back to old school. Thanks buddy. Enjoyed the video!
One thing Vince mentioned in his videos about flow improver that you didn't here is that it can be used to paint much finer lines and details! The lower surface tension means it sticks to itself and goes on thinner. Very handy and about the only thing that could have convinced me to buy it. I mostly use water but I have some airbrush medium for mixing with artist paint to get it to go through the airbrush nice.
Couldnt have found this video at a better time, im working on a lot different painting projects and each needs me to learn new methods of working with and manipulating my paints. Im gona have a lot of fun experimenting with these
Some experimentation with these is also good. I find Army Painter Warpaints Mixing Medium tends to make my paints chalky. My favorite is Privateer Press's P3 Medium but it can be hard to get. In a side-by-side comparison you can see most paints turn chalky with the Army Painter one while P3's has a silky look I like and generally helps things build up with nice gradation. Vallejo's Glaze Medium, on the other hand, slows the drying down and can make for nicer wet blending. You'd think all three would be the same, but it definitely pays to play around with them. If you're a 3D printer as well as painter, finding a good basic mini to paint over and over with a variety of approaches and brands is a good way to compare to find what works for you. Or, that's a great reason to keep your misprints. I keep my misprints to try different things in different areas before using them on a successfully printed mini.
When I got into painting, Citadel paints were still just making their way to the US, and not in great quantities, so pre-mixed washes weren't readily available. An old historical gamer taught me to make a wash by mixing your paint with water and the tiniest bit of dishwashing soap. It breaks the water tension and allows it to flow without any trouble. I still use it to this day. I put a little soap in a bottle of water and keep it nearby to use whenever I'm thinning paints or making washes.
Hoping to get some feedback on this. I recently took the plunge into 3D printed minis. My plan has been to prime and/or base coat with an alcohol based acrylic. Reason being - we want to cure our resin and keep it stable in the long run. People + internet research has yielded something like 3 days for the model and 3 days for the 1st coat of paint to cure. DEFINITELY do your own research. My point is - slightly thinned alcohol based flat acrylic can be applied somewhat thickly and quickly, then as a unified coating, it has a tendency to shrink down nicely. I use whatever thinner is offered by the primer's maker specifically BECAUSE it has other ingredients besides just one kind of alcohol in them AND because some college and some professional chemical training has taught me that chemicals that have reacted tend to arrest, which would seem to be the goal. Examining my 3D printed model after that has revealed that, depending on the model's orientation during printing, certain surface angles will show more or less of the grain of the printing process, which may call for more primer or base coat. And I'm coming at this realizing that some people literally sand their printed minis, but I don't. I look for surface additives that I can layer selectively. I should also mention that I would not use this process for army painting unless I was willing to leave a lot of defects in the playable models, but I don't print or have printed large numbers of units, although I understand some do.
If you read the directions on the bottles of Liquitex FloAid and SloDri, you mix 1oz of FloAid with 20oz of (distilled) water. SloDri is mixed 1:1 with water (but I don't have a bottle to confirm. I just know that I mixed 1oz Floaid, 20oz water and 4 & 4 oz of SloDri in a bottle and use that to thin my paints. I then add 3 more oz of water to make 32oz of solution just to fill up the bottle. I get very smooth blends this way. I also find Liquitex glaze medium is pretty glossy, i usually mix 1:1 with matte medium to offset that a bit and take that 1:4 -1:8 with water to make it really thin. I glaze a lot so it seems to work...
A clear natural dish drop for breaking the surface tension with paint and inks. Another is using Pledge One Go (or Long Life self-shining floor polish at Bunnings in Australia) mixed in as a drop that also gives a great rock hard finish. Even though it is a gloss it can always be hit with a matt over the top. Never had a miniature chip after adding that.
I've found it does depend on what paints your using (which you reiterated multiple times :). the Scalecolor artist I use can be thinned really far w/ water at both glaze and wash level. However, the non-artist paints I have do better w/ different mediums. You also just explained why some of my attempts to stretch the paint with water hasn't worked well :) lol. Thank you for this information! Excellent video! thank you for making it.
Great video topic Adam, I use mostly medium in my painting now, before just drops of water, but that use to split the paint and weaken the pigment, but medium keeps the consistency. One of my hobby bugbears is greenstuff, trying just fill holes and gaps i find really awkward, but i see people sculpting with it to perfection. So a beginners guide to green stuff would be awesome. Love your videos 😉👏👌
I use white glue to fill cracks quite often, for small cracks it works well. Manipulate it into the crack with a hobby knife point or pin / tootpick, wipe the excess off with a finger and let cure. Sand to smooth. Wood glue works well for this too, and has a lot less shrinkage so you usually only have to do one coat. For holes, Crayola Model Magic works great and its CHEAP !!
I sculpt with greenstuff but hate trying to fill gaps/holes with it. I prefer milliput but I'm pretty sure it was in one of the Tabletop Minions Awards videos that Uncle Atom features a gap filling putty. Since you've got the greenstuff though, it's worth trying out different ratios in the mix and see if that works for you. If you start by using less blue, that should make the mix squish into the gaps better but will harden slower. If it's a smoothing problem, wait until the putty is almost cured (45-60 minutes for me depending on ambient temperature) before you smooth the surface out. It'll move less per pass this way resists tool marks better.
Always a great topic. Was always confused on all these things, when I first started out. Still a relatively new painter, but the one I've had good success with is Daler Rowney Flow aid. I use An 80/20 mix; Distilled Water to flow aid, and it has worked quite well for me. Golden Satin Glaze with about the same proportions works great for me as well
I bought a small space marine paint kit to practice the paints, washes and that fun painting stuff to see what I like doing. I am thinking about mixing brands with certain effects. All else fails I'll check out painting miniature videos on here and ask the art supply store for certain ways or how to do for certain look for my boys.
Contrast medium is the only additive I've used so far. The issues you described about washes on flat surfaces have been almost exactly my experience with that. This video should help me with that.
This was great! I personally like to use one or two drops of the vallejo flow improver when preparing and mixing paint for brush painting. It helps the paint move and stay smooth. Doesn't slow down drying time very much.
Ive heard multiple people recommend using varnish between stages to essentialy create a save point before a wash or something like that. But if you screw up a stage after the varnish how do you remove it? Alcohol? What if you use oil after? Will mineral spirits be safe with varnish? What varnishes/clear coats are recommended for what. No one seams to talk about that. Love to see a video on it.
Your partner in crime, Vincy V, made an HC video topic on mediums, and he showed how they work! Though tbh, r results for some of them looked pretty similar. HC 135 to be exact.
Great advice! premixed airbrush paints have been a game changer for me. As much as I like Vallejo primer, it needs a lot of thinner, in my opinion. I've switched to Army Painter, except for my white primer. Thanks for the video!
I've found that a 1:1:1 speedpaint + speedpaint medium + water works surprisingly well for dialing them back a little more into the "slop on one coat" situation they're generally advertised as, but without as much pooling to clean up afterward.
Very informative. Your local art stores are a good source of additives and advice too. An explanation of layer/wash/glaze/pin wash hasn't been done for a while and these terms could use an airing. Thanks
I usually end up using speedpaint by army painter more than anything else. If I do use anything it's just speed paint medium, though I do use holy white speedpaint to try and lighten up certain paints. It doesn't always work but it's nice when it does. I also use runic gray in place of something like nuln oil to shade metallics and darken crevices sometimes since it has a "blue" tinge to it that I like. If I had to give any advice for new people in the hobby, it's to just have fun. I barely look at rules or lore when making stuff and just build and paint whatever I think looks neat or feel will fit narratively into one of my armies. Of course everyone is different, but just messing around and enjoying yourself is how I like to hobby. Thanks for the video and God bless you all, and your little army peeps.
I don't use acrylics much these days, but I did like thinning with inks. Also goobertown tought me how to make my own contrast paint. I prefer other serfactants to dish soap for obvious reasons.
Thanks so much for this video - it's answered a lot of questions I've had and been too lazy to research. Now I can use that bottle of Speedpaint Medium that's just been sitting in my rack!
As always an excellent video "Tio Adam"! Hope you get better with the cough thingie. And I also use Army Painter products. Very good stuff. Anyway have a safe and nice weekend
I’m totally here for a hobby lecture. You can never stop learning. Even as a veteran painter. I brain fart on a lot of this. One video topic I’d love to hear you opine on in more detail is how to help keep newer war game players/painters from suffering burnout
i use Liquites Fluid Flat Mediium, Gloss medium and Master's Touch Flow Medium (it's cheaper and does the same as Liquitex). Also a 1:100 dish detergent:water mix to pre wet the surface for some really cool streaking effects or to just get some wild blends.
For airbrush I've been using the Vallejo airbrush thinner for ages and always had issues with paint drying on the tip. Then I saw a video explaining the difference between airbrush thinner and flow improver and got a bottle of their flow improver. Long story short: the flow improver contains paint retarder, so you don't get dry tips and is meant for thinning down thicker paints. Airbrush thinner is meant for stuff that is already quite fluid, like inks.
Perhaps a video on game scale. Not figure scale, but game scale. I imagine most wargaming get into the hobby playing skirmish level games where the figures are 1:1 in what they represent. But some games can be for example battalion, brigade or even division and army level. That has an effect on the scale of the figures and how they are based. Also affects the rules, tactics and levels of abstraction.
I do have to give acrylics this. The names of additives for them do mostly make sense. Oils though... meglip, damar crystal? Yeah just adds to the magic.
You mentioned you liked the Secret Weapon washes. If you want to try to recreate them, i believe they were based on Les Bursley's wash recipe, posted here on UA-cam, Dakkadakka, and elsewhere.
Can you please do a video on how to approach 40K in bite size obtainable steps. Essentially on how to dip your toes into the hobby without biting off more then you can chew. I have a younger cousin new to the hobby an he’s struggling where to even start an I remember being there myself. Figured you’d figure out a good approach on how to enter the hobby comfortably an aswell without committing to much until you’re absolutely certain this “army” or part of the hobby is for you.
Second KillTeam. A GW employee steered me toward KT from the beginning - I didn’t listen, thinking they were just trying to sell more stuff. Little did I know then - they were genuinely trying to help (I know, surprise!) - if I had listened to them, instead of going full hog - I’d have all my painting done and be playing actual games by now.
GW built the new Combat Patrol system as 40k 'lite'.. No list building. You buy that box and play against other boxes. Set rules for that box and you learn the basics of 40k. Seems like a good place to start. Kill Team is fun, but a different game altogether.. And many Combat Patrols are similar #s of models
Main rule book, a combat patrol, look at the combat patrol for the recommended paint scheme buy just those paints, buy a 0,1, and 2 mid priced synthetic hair brush ( you are looking for a nice point to the bristles) they'll be good first brushes that's OK to get abused. If you get a boxed set you basically get 2 combat patrols some terrain, dice and main rule book in one package. Also a good place to start but more limited on which factions you get.
A great overview as always. I've been digging through the back catalogue of videos and want to know if the older "Pa-chow: Hobby Hero" shirt will ever make a comeback or if I'm looking in the wrong place for it?
Please continue with the “tell” or lecture portion of your videos in addition to the show portion. I very much like your relaxed tempo. I don’t play, I paint, but enjoy watching your videos. Ti find them very informative and kind of relaxing (I paint to relieve stress)
Hi Uncle A. This is a very good video for beginners, but I feel it misses one crucial point. There are different types of paint, and the appropriate additives need to be used with the appropriate paints. Using water based thinners with lacquer based paints, for example, is a recipe for trouble. I understand that this video is aimed at people who generally use water based acrylics but many beginners may just buy paints like Tamiya at the hobby store without realising their different properties. Hope to catch you on Twitch later 👍 🙂
Uncle Atom, I consulted with my apothecary, who suggests large quantities of chicken soup to repell the warriors of Chaos that are attacking you. Hope you feel better soon!
So one thing I do for my Night Lords in 30k is mix kantor blue (gw) Deep Blue (army painter) and tellesar blue (contrast) along with water as needed. Gives me a slightly unique blue hue.
For Vallejo paint I do find their Vallejo Thinner and Airbrush Flow Improver work great together, however for GW paints the Vallejo thinner doesnt work so well. The Tamiya X-20A works fantastic with GW paint. The Tamiya X-20A smells like a solvent to me. If I am airbrushing Vallejo Model or Game color = water, vallejo thinner, vallejo flow improver. If airbrushing GW paint = Tamiya X-20A, water, and a bit of flow improver.
What is a good topic for a video? How would you introduce a new player, whom like to play the game, but they have the tendency to thow with stuf when they lose.... Probably throw the figures and terrain... 😂 What are the best ideas you have? 😅🎉
I had a friend that when he would win would say ef you to my models, so after about 3 times of this, I won and did the same back to him he got super pissed off and we haven't played since, i was sorta over his bs and was ok with it
This video was a great explanation and breakdown. Thank you so much. It is much appreciated. Also, quick question do your hands get tired throughout the video?
have an idea for a diorama, but having trouble with spacemarines in a Kneeling position, other than buying some. Have you kit bashed miniatures to a Kneeling scenario, if so, How
Here to bump those numbers since I didn't have time before the Friday morning stream ;) Seriously though fantastic video, got my chemistry loving gf to tell me to go back and restart the video for her lol
Thanks for the video! I'm brand new to the hobby, and learning about these different additives and how paint works is really helpful! I have a bit of an odd question, if you can help. In looking for a nice gold paint, I accidently bought some AK Xtreme Metal Gold not realizing it was for airbrushes. I haven't actually tried using it yet because it's so thin, but do you know of any way to kind of *thicken* really thin paints?
I use water to thin acrylic paints, I rarely use medium mainly for weathering. However, I've been using them with shade and contrast paints, they've been useful in recent years. I might use something other than water for thinning paints, will still use water to clean paint off my brush. 🖌
I got it on Amazon - it’s a wall-mounted rack for nail polish bottles. Nail salons buy them. All my paint racks are nail polish storage, they work great. Thanks for watching!
Should you always use additives from the same company as your paint? Or can you, for instance, use Armu Painter additives with Vallejo or Citadel? What about craft additives like Liquitex?
I find I generally use mediums from the same company as the paint I’m using, but other additives can come from anywhere. I’m not sure if I’m right, but I’ve done it that way in the past. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the video! The question i am left with is, how paint brand agnostic are these mediums? Are there any potential issues using the fanatic stabilizer with vallejo game color, for example. Or is it better to stick to vallejo mediums for vallejo paints and so on. I suspect the answer is "experiment, and see what works for you" but that too would be nice to get confirmed ;)
Honestly, with flow improver and drying retarders, I don’t know if brand is that important. I generally stick with medium that matches the paint brand, though. Not sure if it’s needed, but it’s how I do it. Thanks for watching!
@@tabletopminions And thanks for the answer. I think I will try to stick with the same brand for now and then, if and when I get more praints, I will see where that takes me. Cheers.
Tips for new hobbyist: You don't have to buy anything you do not want to buy. I learned this the hard way. My RPG side of the brain finally convinced me.
I make my own, I’m on a tight budget until my terrain and hobby tools (STL) designs starts selling. I use craft paint for most of my hobby. I have limited paint for miniatures.s
All these examples of additives and how they are used but nothing about how they affect the flavor of your paint water when you take a sip of it instead of your beverage.
@@tabletopminions I don't know, am I the worst commentor? Its just I never see how to plays, only lets plays, if one ever needed a video to make how to's are needed. I don't think how to's ruin a game as they don't go into every models stats, If I were to recommend a starting place I would suggest your own games, lets get hands on with a creator and see the gears spin.
@@tabletopminions the trick would be making rolls sound interesting, like goal management and terrain benifits, or what resources can be used as an advantage. It would take a few tries to get the flow and structure right, its possible
I love Glaze medium. Not only does it help with the flow of my paint. but it seems to keep the brush having paint dry on it( so it comes off it smoothly). But the big win is when I get a little paint somewhere I didn't want, I have a few more seconds to wipe or brush it off without it drying on me.
In the last 2 years, I have gotten completely away from water except for my rinse cup (which I put a little Dawn into, so even that isn't just water) and my wet palette. I use Liquitex Flow Aid as a brush wetting agent, Cuttlefish Colors Merlin's Magic Medium for thinning my paints and making glazes (this stuff is AMAZING) and Golden Airbrush Medium for thinning for the airbrush. And when I need to change the consistency/saturation of my speedpaints and washes, I use Army Painter Speedpaint Meduim or Wash Medium. Other additives I keep on hand are Liquitex Drying Retarder, Liquitex Matte Medium and Vallejo Airbrush Flow Improver.
I build and paint Gundam, so major of my work is with air brush. And I’ve found that the additive should be added when you run into a problem and the additive should help. Flow improver if the paint won’t spray, thinner if the paint goes on the part too thick. Ect…
This video is really helpful as I'm two years into the hobby and I think it's time for me to move beyond thinning all my paints with water. The dry Minnesota air has really been keeping me from having success with wet blending too.
As a whole, I only use Vallejo Glaze Medium. However, for washes specifically, I use Army Painter Strong Tone (a wash) as an additive (along with Glaze Medium and water) to make my own washes better.
In this video Adam tries to log off... I'm a terrible painter (in terms of the way I do things, I try to do things the cheapest, easiest, simplest, as quick as possible way). I don't generally use additives besides thinner for airbrushing and water for brush painting - I find it too much of a faff to find out what works. Where I've picked up Contrast Paint I do use GWs medium to thin it (would love to find a cheaper alternative). I love Vallejo's glaze medium, it gets rid of the tide mark problem, it's made glazing on highlights much better. Never found the need for anything else.
Great video, I'm so glad UA-cam put one of your videos in my feed. If you're going to be at NOVA again this year you should come check out the 40k narrative.
Earlier on in my hobby journey I just used water if I wanted to modify something on the fly. Now with The Army Painter providing a bottle of medium, I've enjoyed using that to modify my paints whether it be a small amount or a large amount. It works so much better and its so easy to use! I know it's been a while since your previous series on airbrushing basics. Would it be worthwhile to make an updated "Airbrushing 101" style video? That was always an intimidating aspect of painting for me until I finally dove in.
A good clarification for folk new to mediums. Thanks Adam. One of my favorite mediums is actually contrast medium, and not for thinning contrast paints, just as a medium to thin paints for glazing and such. Something else I’ve found is that using air brush thinner to thin metallic paints works well, as opposed to using water.
I’ve been using Speedpaint Medium to make glazes recently - I started when I worked on my NOVA Open display piece. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the additional tips, Alex! I’m going to try that trick with metallics.
excellent! thank you for sharing!
Some great tips which I'll use. Cheers! 👍
I use Winsor and Newton artists' Acrylic Flow Improver. A 75ml bottle doesn't cost much and last me years!
Acrylic medium also comes in large quantities for artist use, which usually works out a lot cheaper than small pots of branded miniature paint.
WN is a really nice (if a little pricy in some instances) art brand and has a lot of great crossover with mini painting brands. Another good one is Golden. I use a lot of Golden paints and additives and they’re high quality and fantastic.
Great timing as I'm about to step into this for the first time since um 2002.
Get better soon
Thank you for the explanation. I've often wondered if there was a difference between them all.
I’m glad you made this video because is hard to find one place to do an amazing overview.
As you said before sometimes youtubers assume that the viewer has some knowledge of what they are talking about.
That said I’ve used alcohol as a thinner because I used Tamiya Paints and they are alcohol based acrylic paints.
As someone trying to get into wargame, I would love to see a how to play one page rules video. Maybe even a battle report, but with pauses to explain how the game is being played. Love your videos, man!
Ditto. What First Impression said.
This video brought me back to 1992 when I went to college for art school. Great review for those that want to learn or to someone getting back to old school. Thanks buddy. Enjoyed the video!
One thing Vince mentioned in his videos about flow improver that you didn't here is that it can be used to paint much finer lines and details! The lower surface tension means it sticks to itself and goes on thinner. Very handy and about the only thing that could have convinced me to buy it. I mostly use water but I have some airbrush medium for mixing with artist paint to get it to go through the airbrush nice.
Couldnt have found this video at a better time, im working on a lot different painting projects and each needs me to learn new methods of working with and manipulating my paints. Im gona have a lot of fun experimenting with these
Some experimentation with these is also good. I find Army Painter Warpaints Mixing Medium tends to make my paints chalky. My favorite is Privateer Press's P3 Medium but it can be hard to get. In a side-by-side comparison you can see most paints turn chalky with the Army Painter one while P3's has a silky look I like and generally helps things build up with nice gradation. Vallejo's Glaze Medium, on the other hand, slows the drying down and can make for nicer wet blending. You'd think all three would be the same, but it definitely pays to play around with them. If you're a 3D printer as well as painter, finding a good basic mini to paint over and over with a variety of approaches and brands is a good way to compare to find what works for you. Or, that's a great reason to keep your misprints. I keep my misprints to try different things in different areas before using them on a successfully printed mini.
I have actually added a few drops of Army Painter speed paints to like colour standard paints and it works quite amazingly!
Awesome video, answers to questions people want to ask but feel uncomfortable so they dont
When I got into painting, Citadel paints were still just making their way to the US, and not in great quantities, so pre-mixed washes weren't readily available. An old historical gamer taught me to make a wash by mixing your paint with water and the tiniest bit of dishwashing soap. It breaks the water tension and allows it to flow without any trouble. I still use it to this day. I put a little soap in a bottle of water and keep it nearby to use whenever I'm thinning paints or making washes.
Hoping to get some feedback on this. I recently took the plunge into 3D printed minis. My plan has been to prime and/or base coat with an alcohol based acrylic. Reason being - we want to cure our resin and keep it stable in the long run. People + internet research has yielded something like 3 days for the model and 3 days for the 1st coat of paint to cure. DEFINITELY do your own research. My point is - slightly thinned alcohol based flat acrylic can be applied somewhat thickly and quickly, then as a unified coating, it has a tendency to shrink down nicely. I use whatever thinner is offered by the primer's maker specifically BECAUSE it has other ingredients besides just one kind of alcohol in them AND because some college and some professional chemical training has taught me that chemicals that have reacted tend to arrest, which would seem to be the goal. Examining my 3D printed model after that has revealed that, depending on the model's orientation during printing, certain surface angles will show more or less of the grain of the printing process, which may call for more primer or base coat. And I'm coming at this realizing that some people literally sand their printed minis, but I don't. I look for surface additives that I can layer selectively. I should also mention that I would not use this process for army painting unless I was willing to leave a lot of defects in the playable models, but I don't print or have printed large numbers of units, although I understand some do.
I’ve been barely sick with a weird “almost-cold” for over a week now too. Lots of people have had it. Who knows, get mostly better soon!
If you read the directions on the bottles of Liquitex FloAid and SloDri, you mix 1oz of FloAid with 20oz of (distilled) water. SloDri is mixed 1:1 with water (but I don't have a bottle to confirm. I just know that I mixed 1oz Floaid, 20oz water and 4 & 4 oz of SloDri in a bottle and use that to thin my paints. I then add 3 more oz of water to make 32oz of solution just to fill up the bottle. I get very smooth blends this way. I also find Liquitex glaze medium is pretty glossy, i usually mix 1:1 with matte medium to offset that a bit and take that 1:4 -1:8 with water to make it really thin. I glaze a lot so it seems to work...
A clear natural dish drop for breaking the surface tension with paint and inks. Another is using Pledge One Go (or Long Life self-shining floor polish at Bunnings in Australia) mixed in as a drop that also gives a great rock hard finish. Even though it is a gloss it can always be hit with a matt over the top. Never had a miniature chip after adding that.
I use Army Painters Airbrush medium to thin paint for regular brush work. Its just better then water and makes it flow better in a controlled way.
I've found it does depend on what paints your using (which you reiterated multiple times :). the Scalecolor artist I use can be thinned really far w/ water at both glaze and wash level. However, the non-artist paints I have do better w/ different mediums. You also just explained why some of my attempts to stretch the paint with water hasn't worked well :) lol. Thank you for this information! Excellent video! thank you for making it.
Nice video! I mostly make my own medium (water, matte medium, dish soap), but I do use a drying retarder on occasion.
Great video topic Adam, I use mostly medium in my painting now, before just drops of water, but that use to split the paint and weaken the pigment, but medium keeps the consistency. One of my hobby bugbears is greenstuff, trying just fill holes and gaps i find really awkward, but i see people sculpting with it to perfection. So a beginners guide to green stuff would be awesome. Love your videos 😉👏👌
I use white glue to fill cracks quite often, for small cracks it works well. Manipulate it into the crack with a hobby knife point or pin / tootpick, wipe the excess off with a finger and let cure. Sand to smooth. Wood glue works well for this too, and has a lot less shrinkage so you usually only have to do one coat. For holes, Crayola Model Magic works great and its CHEAP !!
I sculpt with greenstuff but hate trying to fill gaps/holes with it. I prefer milliput but I'm pretty sure it was in one of the Tabletop Minions Awards videos that Uncle Atom features a gap filling putty.
Since you've got the greenstuff though, it's worth trying out different ratios in the mix and see if that works for you. If you start by using less blue, that should make the mix squish into the gaps better but will harden slower. If it's a smoothing problem, wait until the putty is almost cured (45-60 minutes for me depending on ambient temperature) before you smooth the surface out. It'll move less per pass this way resists tool marks better.
Always a great topic. Was always confused on all these things, when I first started out. Still a relatively new painter, but the one I've had good success with is Daler Rowney Flow aid. I use An 80/20 mix; Distilled Water to flow aid, and it has worked quite well for me. Golden Satin Glaze with about the same proportions works great for me as well
I bought a small space marine paint kit to practice the paints, washes and that fun painting stuff to see what I like doing. I am thinking about mixing brands with certain effects.
All else fails I'll check out painting miniature videos on here and ask the art supply store for certain ways or how to do for certain look for my boys.
Great video; it Neatly summed up what it took me many years to pick up.
Contrast medium is the only additive I've used so far. The issues you described about washes on flat surfaces have been almost exactly my experience with that. This video should help me with that.
This was great! I personally like to use one or two drops of the vallejo flow improver when preparing and mixing paint for brush painting. It helps the paint move and stay smooth. Doesn't slow down drying time very much.
Ive heard multiple people recommend using varnish between stages to essentialy create a save point before a wash or something like that. But if you screw up a stage after the varnish how do you remove it? Alcohol? What if you use oil after? Will mineral spirits be safe with varnish? What varnishes/clear coats are recommended for what. No one seams to talk about that. Love to see a video on it.
Your partner in crime, Vincy V, made an HC video topic on mediums, and he showed how they work! Though tbh, r results for some of them looked pretty similar. HC 135 to be exact.
This is a FANTASTIC topic. Thanks for taking it on! The lab coat was a nice touch. 😊
Great advice! premixed airbrush paints have been a game changer for me. As much as I like Vallejo primer, it needs a lot of thinner, in my opinion. I've switched to Army Painter, except for my white primer. Thanks for the video!
What a great overview for anyone new to, or especially maybe using these things without actual understanding of what they're good for
I've found that a 1:1:1 speedpaint + speedpaint medium + water works surprisingly well for dialing them back a little more into the "slop on one coat" situation they're generally advertised as, but without as much pooling to clean up afterward.
Very informative. Your local art stores are a good source of additives and advice too. An explanation of layer/wash/glaze/pin wash hasn't been done for a while and these terms could use an airing. Thanks
Really great video! One of my favorite products is the Daler-Rowney flow enhancer, especially used with metallic paints.
I usually end up using speedpaint by army painter more than anything else. If I do use anything it's just speed paint medium, though I do use holy white speedpaint to try and lighten up certain paints. It doesn't always work but it's nice when it does. I also use runic gray in place of something like nuln oil to shade metallics and darken crevices sometimes since it has a "blue" tinge to it that I like. If I had to give any advice for new people in the hobby, it's to just have fun. I barely look at rules or lore when making stuff and just build and paint whatever I think looks neat or feel will fit narratively into one of my armies. Of course everyone is different, but just messing around and enjoying yourself is how I like to hobby. Thanks for the video and God bless you all, and your little army peeps.
I don't use acrylics much these days, but I did like thinning with inks. Also goobertown tought me how to make my own contrast paint. I prefer other serfactants to dish soap for obvious reasons.
Thanks so much for this video - it's answered a lot of questions I've had and been too lazy to research. Now I can use that bottle of Speedpaint Medium that's just been sitting in my rack!
As always an excellent video "Tio Adam"! Hope you get better with the cough thingie. And I also use Army Painter products. Very good stuff. Anyway have a safe and nice weekend
I’m totally here for a hobby lecture. You can never stop learning. Even as a veteran painter. I brain fart on a lot of this.
One video topic I’d love to hear you opine on in more detail is how to help keep newer war game players/painters from suffering burnout
i use Liquites Fluid Flat Mediium, Gloss medium and Master's Touch Flow Medium (it's cheaper and does the same as Liquitex). Also a 1:100 dish detergent:water mix to pre wet the surface for some really cool streaking effects or to just get some wild blends.
For airbrush I've been using the Vallejo airbrush thinner for ages and always had issues with paint drying on the tip. Then I saw a video explaining the difference between airbrush thinner and flow improver and got a bottle of their flow improver.
Long story short: the flow improver contains paint retarder, so you don't get dry tips and is meant for thinning down thicker paints. Airbrush thinner is meant for stuff that is already quite fluid, like inks.
I use the heck out of the Water+ from Instar Paint. It’s got surfactant and dry retardant properties and works across every paint I’ve tried it with.
Perhaps a video on game scale. Not figure scale, but game scale. I imagine most wargaming get into the hobby playing skirmish level games where the figures are 1:1 in what they represent. But some games can be for example battalion, brigade or even division and army level. That has an effect on the scale of the figures and how they are based. Also affects the rules, tactics and levels of abstraction.
I do have to give acrylics this. The names of additives for them do mostly make sense. Oils though... meglip, damar crystal? Yeah just adds to the magic.
You mentioned you liked the Secret Weapon washes. If you want to try to recreate them, i believe they were based on Les Bursley's wash recipe, posted here on UA-cam, Dakkadakka, and elsewhere.
Great video! I’m not a new painter but I’m also not a great one either, so a video explaining what these products are is very helpful.
Can you please do a video on how to approach 40K in bite size obtainable steps. Essentially on how to dip your toes into the hobby without biting off more then you can chew. I have a younger cousin new to the hobby an he’s struggling where to even start an I remember being there myself. Figured you’d figure out a good approach on how to enter the hobby comfortably an aswell without committing to much until you’re absolutely certain this “army” or part of the hobby is for you.
Uncle Adam isn’t exclusively nor particularly a huge “40K fan”.
He likes steering gamers towards a lot of independent games too.
Without trying to sound off putting, of you are set on the idea of 40k, I would start with a kill team as a bite size way to get started
Second KillTeam. A GW employee steered me toward KT from the beginning - I didn’t listen, thinking they were just trying to sell more stuff. Little did I know then - they were genuinely trying to help (I know, surprise!) - if I had listened to them, instead of going full hog - I’d have all my painting done and be playing actual games by now.
GW built the new Combat Patrol system as 40k 'lite'.. No list building. You buy that box and play against other boxes. Set rules for that box and you learn the basics of 40k. Seems like a good place to start. Kill Team is fun, but a different game altogether.. And many Combat Patrols are similar #s of models
Main rule book, a combat patrol, look at the combat patrol for the recommended paint scheme buy just those paints, buy a 0,1, and 2 mid priced synthetic hair brush ( you are looking for a nice point to the bristles) they'll be good first brushes that's OK to get abused.
If you get a boxed set you basically get 2 combat patrols some terrain, dice and main rule book in one package. Also a good place to start but more limited on which factions you get.
A great overview as always. I've been digging through the back catalogue of videos and want to know if the older "Pa-chow: Hobby Hero" shirt will ever make a comeback or if I'm looking in the wrong place for it?
Please continue with the “tell” or lecture portion of your videos in addition to the show portion. I very much like your relaxed tempo. I don’t play, I paint, but enjoy watching your videos. Ti find them very informative and kind of relaxing (I paint to relieve stress)
This is a great topic, and a very clear explanation of these materials. Thank you!
Hi Uncle A. This is a very good video for beginners, but I feel it misses one crucial point. There are different types of paint, and the appropriate additives need to be used with the appropriate paints. Using water based thinners with lacquer based paints, for example, is a recipe for trouble. I understand that this video is aimed at people who generally use water based acrylics but many beginners may just buy paints like Tamiya at the hobby store without realising their different properties. Hope to catch you on Twitch later 👍 🙂
Thank you!!! This is great reference and clarification on what does what.
Great topic! This is something I have found challenging so thanks for this video!!
I only tend to use water but I have got some contrast medium which I want to use a bit more instead of
Uncle Atom, I consulted with my apothecary, who suggests large quantities of chicken soup to repell the warriors of Chaos that are attacking you. Hope you feel better soon!
So one thing I do for my Night Lords in 30k is mix kantor blue (gw) Deep Blue (army painter) and tellesar blue (contrast) along with water as needed. Gives me a slightly unique blue hue.
Experimentation like that is fun and can have great results. Thanks for watching!
For Vallejo paint I do find their Vallejo Thinner and Airbrush Flow Improver work great together, however for GW paints the Vallejo thinner doesnt work so well. The Tamiya X-20A works fantastic with GW paint. The Tamiya X-20A smells like a solvent to me.
If I am airbrushing Vallejo Model or Game color = water, vallejo thinner, vallejo flow improver. If airbrushing GW paint = Tamiya X-20A, water, and a bit of flow improver.
There's a pearlescent medium that you can use to make your own metallic paint.
What is a good topic for a video?
How would you introduce a new player, whom like to play the game, but they have the tendency to thow with stuf when they lose.... Probably throw the figures and terrain... 😂
What are the best ideas you have? 😅🎉
I had a friend that when he would win would say ef you to my models, so after about 3 times of this, I won and did the same back to him he got super pissed off and we haven't played since, i was sorta over his bs and was ok with it
This video was a great explanation and breakdown. Thank you so much. It is much appreciated. Also, quick question do your hands get tired throughout the video?
Nope - been talking like that my entire life, so I guess I’ve built up strong arm muscles. Thanks for watching.
have an idea for a diorama, but having trouble with spacemarines in a Kneeling position, other than buying some. Have you kit bashed miniatures to a Kneeling scenario, if so, How
Hey. Extra question. How and where does one store their terrain?
And how do the rest of us do it?????
I had a cold since saturday. Turns out i had rona. Painting time for me!
Your voice sounds actually great here
Love the video, great info. I truly appreciate this kind of approach to material. Thanks!!😁
love it. Thanks Uncle!
Was the "mostly" at the beginning and Aliens reference? Also, I really like ProAcryl Glaze and Wash medium.
It was. Mostly. Thanks for watching!
Here to bump those numbers since I didn't have time before the Friday morning stream ;)
Seriously though fantastic video, got my chemistry loving gf to tell me to go back and restart the video for her lol
Thanks for the video! I'm brand new to the hobby, and learning about these different additives and how paint works is really helpful! I have a bit of an odd question, if you can help. In looking for a nice gold paint, I accidently bought some AK Xtreme Metal Gold not realizing it was for airbrushes. I haven't actually tried using it yet because it's so thin, but do you know of any way to kind of *thicken* really thin paints?
I still don't know what the difference between Vallejo Airbrush Flow Improver vs. Vallejo Airbrush Thinner
I use water to thin acrylic paints, I rarely use medium mainly for weathering. However, I've been using them with shade and contrast paints, they've been useful in recent years. I might use something other than water for thinning paints, will still use water to clean paint off my brush. 🖌
I find water is best for rinsing out your brushes, for sure. Thanks for watching!
@@tabletopminions All good, and thank you for today's video. It's helpful.
Based on my general performance; my favourite additive is coffee when I get the wrong cup.
Thanks! This video was super helpful
What was that rack you had the Army Painter Air paints ? Looks awesome.
I got it on Amazon - it’s a wall-mounted rack for nail polish bottles. Nail salons buy them. All my paint racks are nail polish storage, they work great. Thanks for watching!
I mostly use Golden or Liquitex paint additives. Works well and cheaper than hobby brands.
Super helpful.
I've been struggling with getting the right consistency with water...too little, too much...will be looking more into medium now. Hmmmm
Should you always use additives from the same company as your paint? Or can you, for instance, use Armu Painter additives with Vallejo or Citadel? What about craft additives like Liquitex?
I find I generally use mediums from the same company as the paint I’m using, but other additives can come from anywhere. I’m not sure if I’m right, but I’ve done it that way in the past. Thanks for watching!
What shirt are you wearing in this video! I checked our site and it's not there..... But I frickin' want it. Much love!
It’s from Da Share Zone - they have cool stuff! Thanks for watching!
Great talk! This begs the question, should we be using additive in our wet pallet instead of water?! Thanks!
Probably not? But, you might’ve blown my mind. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the video! The question i am left with is, how paint brand agnostic are these mediums? Are there any potential issues using the fanatic stabilizer with vallejo game color, for example. Or is it better to stick to vallejo mediums for vallejo paints and so on. I suspect the answer is "experiment, and see what works for you" but that too would be nice to get confirmed ;)
Honestly, with flow improver and drying retarders, I don’t know if brand is that important. I generally stick with medium that matches the paint brand, though. Not sure if it’s needed, but it’s how I do it. Thanks for watching!
@@tabletopminions And thanks for the answer. I think I will try to stick with the same brand for now and then, if and when I get more praints, I will see where that takes me. Cheers.
Tips for new hobbyist: You don't have to buy anything you do not want to buy. I learned this the hard way. My RPG side of the brain finally convinced me.
Lab coat merch incoming?
I make my own, I’m on a tight budget until my terrain and hobby tools (STL) designs starts selling. I use craft paint for most of my hobby. I have limited paint for miniatures.s
Lahaman Medium for washes
They have very intuitive names. 😅
30% rubbing alcohol is great
All these examples of additives and how they are used but nothing about how they affect the flavor of your paint water when you take a sip of it instead of your beverage.
I never do that. Trick is to not use a mug for your paint water. Thanks for watching!
Pedantic, not semantic.
Depends if you smoke or sniff them...
Rules of the game would be neat
Rules of which game? Thanks for watching!
@@tabletopminions I don't know, am I the worst commentor? Its just I never see how to plays, only lets plays, if one ever needed a video to make how to's are needed. I don't think how to's ruin a game as they don't go into every models stats, If I were to recommend a starting place I would suggest your own games, lets get hands on with a creator and see the gears spin.
@@tabletopminions the trick would be making rolls sound interesting, like goal management and terrain benifits, or what resources can be used as an advantage. It would take a few tries to get the flow and structure right, its possible
I love Glaze medium. Not only does it help with the flow of my paint. but it seems to keep the brush having paint dry on it( so it comes off it smoothly). But the big win is when I get a little paint somewhere I didn't want, I have a few more seconds to wipe or brush it off without it drying on me.
In the last 2 years, I have gotten completely away from water except for my rinse cup (which I put a little Dawn into, so even that isn't just water) and my wet palette. I use Liquitex Flow Aid as a brush wetting agent, Cuttlefish Colors Merlin's Magic Medium for thinning my paints and making glazes (this stuff is AMAZING) and Golden Airbrush Medium for thinning for the airbrush. And when I need to change the consistency/saturation of my speedpaints and washes, I use Army Painter Speedpaint Meduim or Wash Medium. Other additives I keep on hand are Liquitex Drying Retarder, Liquitex Matte Medium and Vallejo Airbrush Flow Improver.
Can confirm, Merlin’s Magic Medium is some of the best all-purpose medium on the mini-painting market!
Retarder is also good for when you’re painting in a dryer, hotter climate to stop your paint from drying in the bristles of your brush.
Also true - living in Wisconsin, that’s not something I usually have to worry about. Thanks for watching!
I build and paint Gundam, so major of my work is with air brush. And I’ve found that the additive should be added when you run into a problem and the additive should help. Flow improver if the paint won’t spray, thinner if the paint goes on the part too thick. Ect…
This video is really helpful as I'm two years into the hobby and I think it's time for me to move beyond thinning all my paints with water. The dry Minnesota air has really been keeping me from having success with wet blending too.
As a whole, I only use Vallejo Glaze Medium.
However, for washes specifically, I use Army Painter Strong Tone (a wash) as an additive (along with Glaze Medium and water) to make my own washes better.
In this video Adam tries to log off... I'm a terrible painter (in terms of the way I do things, I try to do things the cheapest, easiest, simplest, as quick as possible way). I don't generally use additives besides thinner for airbrushing and water for brush painting - I find it too much of a faff to find out what works. Where I've picked up Contrast Paint I do use GWs medium to thin it (would love to find a cheaper alternative). I love Vallejo's glaze medium, it gets rid of the tide mark problem, it's made glazing on highlights much better. Never found the need for anything else.
Great video, I'm so glad UA-cam put one of your videos in my feed. If you're going to be at NOVA again this year you should come check out the 40k narrative.
Earlier on in my hobby journey I just used water if I wanted to modify something on the fly. Now with The Army Painter providing a bottle of medium, I've enjoyed using that to modify my paints whether it be a small amount or a large amount. It works so much better and its so easy to use!
I know it's been a while since your previous series on airbrushing basics. Would it be worthwhile to make an updated "Airbrushing 101" style video? That was always an intimidating aspect of painting for me until I finally dove in.