Well since the last time I posted, the thing call school started. *plays sad mournful music* Seeing that school is in full swing, model horsing has been put on the back burner. But since I completely changed around my inside art table today, I decided to let myself do some model horse stuff.
The body lot
Over the last week, I’ve added a bunch of models to my body box. Well, actually they aren’t in the body box. They’re each separated so they don’t touch. All of these models I have an exact copy in my collection, so I’m going to compare the two and decide who’s going to get hacked and who’s staying original finish.
RIP Black–But Welcome New!
Do you remember this guy? Well he is no more. My kittens decided to push him off my shelf, causing his paint job to be ruined. His scratches cut pretty deep! You could see some of his original finish color!
Well, the horse no longer Black, is now a blue roan paint.
I’ve never done the hair by hair detailing before, but it was alot of fun. It took forever but worked out. One of the few model horse customizing jobs I could do sitting in front of the TV without making a mess.
The ingredients I used were:
white charcoal pencil
white prismacolor pencil
gray pastel
matte finish spray
I used this picture alot to know how a horse’s hair flows. After each layer I would spray the matte finish and tone down the white hair marks with gray pastels.
Who Let the Dog Out
Today I got one model done or mostly done. I love my new airbrush! It has made painting so much faster and it always comes out smooth.
So my first completed model is the Indian Dog. He just needs to have his eyes finished. I did hand paint the white markings, but everything else was air brushed. The most important thing I’ve learned with the airbrush is making sure you have the right equipment. Always make sure you do and don’t try to work around it. Get the right equipment first, and you don’t have to worry about issues later!










