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Back to the little trains......Does Weaver make anything in N scale?
Yes, they had a full line of excellent N scale products called . . . paint!Good quality old-fashioned organic solvent based paint. Easy to brush oh, and it airbrushed with no fuss and no tip clogging (that water-based paints are infamous for). It adhered well to metal and plastic and dried to a glossy finish, perfect for decaling without need to apply any additional (detail-hiding) coats of clear lacquer. And it smelled good too!
There're still paints -- tons and tons of paints!! Made for the military and D&D and fantasy figures and plastic models crowds, for the crafts workers with their castings, modpodge, whatever (think Micheal's), art stores for the thousands of students in art classes .... what's the problem?
You have totally missed my point: I DO NO LIKE WATER-BASED PAINTS!!! All the ones you mentioned do me diddly-squat! I couldn't care less what the color names are.
I think Peteski has posted enough evidence on this board to classify his hobby space as an EPA Superfund site. Don't answer the door
Geez!Where was the government nanny in the 60s, 70,s and 80s when all the hobbyists were using those stinky and hazardous paints, sniffing glue and airplane dope? With all those hazards, I somehow managed to survive into my 50s. I'm still alive and kicking. Um, what are those guys in white full-body suits doing in my driveway?! Why are they carrying those strange containers? Hey, what are you doing? Leave my Floquil paints alone! Come on, can't a guy have some fun and get high building a model?
Where was the government nanny in the 60s, 70,s and 80s when all the hobbyists were using those stinky and hazardous paints, sniffing glue and airplane dope? With all those hazards, I somehow managed to survive into my 50s. I'm still alive and kicking.