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Logically, this should mean painting the yellow first (after primer) and then masking off and painting the blue, right?DFF
As far as primers go, my favorite is decanted from a spray can Tamiya Fine White Primer.
I prefer to minimize the thickens of the paint on my N scale models. Kaot uses a light gray plastic for their shells - I usually do not prime them (to save 1 coat of paint), but to brighten the yellow paint, white prime should work the best. The Tamiya white primer is as opaque as other primers go - it should fully cover even black substrate.I have white and coupe of gray Tamiya primers (and even a clear one specifically for metal), but I haven't yet encountered a pink Tamiya primer. I also think that yellow would look brighter over yellow rather than pink.
+1 here, but I have always used it straight from the spray can. No hits, no runs, no errors!
Here's another question for the group--what are you guys using for masking multi-color schemes?
Ok .. just striped a Kato F40PH down to plastic .. I plan on painting my own CSXT 9992 model ..1) do I need to prime it --- with what?2) how do I paint the yellow .. (yes . with an airbrush )
Tamiya masking tape is the cats-meow! Once I discovered it, I will never use any flavor of ordinary masking tapes for any precision masking. I still use the blue tape for filling large areas to be masked (but not at the paint demarcation line).