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I miss Floquil.
Are you able to get glossy with SC-II without thickness? I would like to either solve that issue, or get confirmation it's a battle I can't win.I agree with you on the advantages of Tru-Color, but the inability to touch-up or brush over is infuriating.
That Facebook link I posted was for a company called Archive-X paint. Apparently the original Star Wars models were painted with Floquil and this company came out with a line of matched colors in enamel for painting Star Wars models. No idea how to order them though...
I don't recall having problems with SC-II having to be applied thickly to get a glossy surface. I thin it with lacquer thinner for airbrushing and it dries glossy. But the models surface has to be smooth.I also go through great masking pains to avoid any touch-ups on my models. I never feel comfortable hand-brushing paint onto a beautifully airbrushed model. I rather spend hours masking then have to touch it up.
I'll try playing with lacquer thinner and see if there's a difference; I've been using the "official" SC-II thinner for reducing and xylene for cleanup.As to touch-up, sometimes there are the tiniest little spots of overspray, or details in another color - stuff I'm used to going after with a 10/0 brush. Even those don't work in T-C - the first touch-up on the original shell was a speck of gray on one of the lifting eyes that found its way through the mask. Got out the brush, and it just didn't cover-up with the yellow, just sort of turned murky. Should've taken that as a clue.