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Ooh nice an they look fantastic battle sisters.
How are you going to paint Our Lady of the Walking Pulpit fully assembled ?
You won’t be able to get to at least 1/3 of the model with a brush.
Might want to leave the arms and sister off, paint them separately and only glue them on when almost finished.
what you can’t reach or see you don’t paint ?
Especially if it’s primed black the shadows should hide the crime, right ?
I’d argue that this is exactly the reason why build & paint instructions could be useful, especially for beginners who won’t know how to do handle this.
Looking at that model, I’m thinking that many of the areas no brush could reach if fully assembled before painting would still be visible – parts of the sister’s back, some of the pulpit behind her, the inside of the Dreadnought’s arms – and The Black Undercoat – Ye Hider of a Myriad of Mistakes and Duller-Downer of Colors – would show very harshly indeed.
I’m having a similar issue with some Bauhaus Ducal Militia I bought second-hand – and fully assembled – right now. Tried prying the backpack and forearms/weapon off one of them, but the previous owner must have used some high quality glue – for all I know, they’ve been glued together since 1995, when they were released – because they’re stuck together REAL good. Not dismantle-able without breaking them, which I do not want to do, since they are fairly fragile and also rather hard to find, so I’m trying to do my best to paint them as they are and accept the fact that the back and most of the chest of the figure is pretty much unreachable with even the smallest brush and will be ‘painted’ rather messily. Not too big of a deal, since no one will ever look at them as closely as I am right now….
I heard a night in the freezer may help break the bonds that superglue creates …
Guess he’ll have to paint it in parts.