Re: Painting in Hot Weather Yeah, you get good moist heat. Keep your water pot full, for brush-painting. Watch your airbrushing the first couple of times, and see how your paint comes out. Practice on a piece of cardboard first. If it seems a little stringy, then you'll need to add a little more thinner. Acrylic paint is hard to judge for airbrushing, until you actuaaly do it, so you'll have to make your own call. If the paint comes out spotty or stringy, then your paint is too thick. If it takes more than a couple of coats to cover, then your paint is too thin. You will have to judge for yourself. Different paints (GW, Vallejo, Reaper, Apple Barrel, Testor's) all spray differently. |