![]() ![]() ![]() Those can be easier, but they’re enamel-based, so cleaning up if you make a mistake (the marker can hop out of the recess if the panel lines are soft, which they tend to be on older kits), you’re using mineral spirits or rubbing alcohol. Tamiya makes a panel liner that uses capillary action to flow down the recesses, and there are markers filled with the same stuff. I should note here that other, possibly better, options exist. I think if you’re just starting out, you can just get a black pen and be totally fine. With the gray one functional, it was brown on yellow and red, black on white or light gray, and black on, again, everything else. I had a gray one until I bent the tip on it, but now I use brown for yellow or red parts, and black on anything else. The markers come in wide sets of colors, but here I use kind of the same system that I do for washes on warhammer miniatures, and pretty much only use black and brown. I’ve been using the normal pen-style Gundam Markers, but I’ve also used Micron. The return on time invested is outrageous. It’s insanely easy, and will improve the look of just about any kit. ![]() Stick the pen tip in the recess and wang it on around, then wipe it down with a paper towel or your hand if you went too hard. This is as easy as can be: you literally just draw directly on the damn thing. This is probably the first step, and one with which our Warhammer-heavy audience will be intimately familiar already. ![]()
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