Sunday, 21 July 2019

Tools of the Trade 2 - Selecting a Painting Station


Due to a change in personal circumstances, I no longer have the luxury of a dedicated area for my hobbies.For the most part, my hobby time is effectively restricted to 90-120 minutes in the evenings during the week or whenever the marauding three year old is otherwise occupied safely on weekends. Almost certainly this will be in the evenings as well.

My area of operations is effectively confined to the living room, so my set up must be portable, easily set up and broken down, and capable of being secured against the cats and the fore-mentioned two-legged Destructor.

So I'm going to need some kind of painting station set up that fits the above criteria and is within a modest budget of around $100-120 AUD. It will need to provide storage for all my tools, paints and basing materials while being capable of fitting within a 70L capacity plastic roll-away container.

Ideally, if my budget was not so constrained, I'd be able to go for the Frontier Gaming case although even then it does have that annoying issue of no self-contained integrated space for a cutting mat. 


I looked at the Army Painter paint station but it was a bit too basic for my needs and I've seen several issues raised regarding durability in other reviews that gave me pause.

In the end I went with a more expensive option: the Paint station from Miniature Scenery at $75 AUD including postage




There were a few points that sold me on this product:
  1. Customisable at time of ordering. I could select different storage options and set ups for left and right sides to suit my needs.
  2. An A4 sized cutting mat is included in the package
  3. The inbuilt tablet/phone stand was a clincher - I will be using my iPad for reference purposes while painting and modelling, and having the phone close at hand offers me a separate option for other audio.

I originally was veering towards the option on the right which included a paint rack for a project sized selection of Vallejos. However I was recently also gifted some Vallejo paint racks (1 straight and two corner racks) as below:



This was an absolute boon, as I use 60ml and 200ml bottles a lot anyway. So I plumped for the paint station option that provided two media device stands and two storage drawers on the reverse. This also provides the option of two water pots and additional storage for tools.



There are a couple of additional storage options on the way with a view to the future but that can wait until next time.

The good thing is, I now have my painting set up on order and can concentrate on acquiring the first lot of miniatures and sorting out my basing options and theme for Sharp Practice.

Pete

Saturday, 20 July 2019

Tools of the Trade 1


For the last 20-something years, I've effectively only gamed and painted 15mm (1;100th) WW2.  Sure I dabbled in Warhammer 40K occasionally, but those armies were very much vehicle heavy armies (Eldar, Tau) or creature types (Tyranids) and apart from the latter, the paint schemes were almost invariably modern camouflage schemes - notably Swedsh 4 colour schemes with white alternate panels.

As a result my current palette of paints is very limited in scope. My 15mm AWI/ACW/1859-1870 armies were either bought painted or were still bare metal. I've been using Vallejo paints since they first became available locally in the late 90s I think, as I found GW paints expensive and definitely not value for money.  Nor did they meet my requirements or suit my painting technique in 15mm and the 28mm stuff I did paint was mostly airbrushed using VMC anyway.


So I will need to purchase a fair few paints in order to expand the palette for the FIW project.  To that end, I'm grabbing three boxed sets of Vallejo (Colonial American, American Revolution and Native American colour sets) plus what I call my British and French supplemental colours. Thankfully the duplication across the 48 bottles is extremely minimal and the duplicates are core paints anyway such as Black, White and Buff. 

As far as basic tools go, I'm good for files, pin-vise and drill bits. I will need to buy some tweezers as the one pair I have is very much reserved for my boardgaming. I would hve liked to get the two Tamiya tweezers below but they're out of my allowable tools budget:


 Instead I've gone with the 75% cheaper option of the Army Painter ones here:



In regard to mediums, varnishes and retarders, I'm sorted in that respect as I still have all of those still, just in storage awaiting the right time to retrieve them.

Brushes are still a work in progress, a while back I was able to get a set of the Army Painter brushes for dirt cheap new in box, but never ended up using them, so they will get some use finally, until I can afford to invest in some more Roymac Purity Sables and Revolution synthetics - I do need multiples of the same brush because I'm going to be keepinmg separate brush sets for Reds, Whites and metallics. I still have nightmares of painting red markings on a mostly white Zero model airplane when I was younger - The Pink Zero was not a great memory.

A few more things for modelling and painting are going to be needed, but the most importatnt first purchase will be a portable painting/modelling area. More on that anon...

Pete