Bill Anderson Posted Saturday at 05:18 PM Posted Saturday at 05:18 PM I've got a second 1967 Corvette to build, this one representing what my Wife drove "back when". It was yellow with a black stripe (and 4 speed). So I have the Revell kit (#2491), which is molded in white plastic. Since IMO painting with yellow can be a bit difficult, I wish to ask the question. Should I paint the yellow directly on the white body shell, or should I apply grey primer first and then the yellow? Oh, the paints are all Tamiya rattle can. Thank you!
Shark Posted Saturday at 05:22 PM Posted Saturday at 05:22 PM Personally, I would use a white primer under yellow, the grey primer may dull it. 8
StevenGuthmiller Posted Saturday at 06:23 PM Posted Saturday at 06:23 PM Just my opinion, but I would never skip primer for a number of reasons. You could open yourself up to all kinds of problems depending on the formulation of the paint. Steve 6
Bucky Posted Saturday at 07:33 PM Posted Saturday at 07:33 PM I tend to use primer for every piece in the box. Having worked in a number of automotive factory paint departments in my days as a pipefitter, I have to say that I've only ever seen gray primers and sealers applied to the bodies, no matter what color paint was to be applied. In our hobby, however, I have used black, red, white, dark gray and light gray primer, depending on how I wanted the color to stand out. 2
DJMar Posted Saturday at 07:41 PM Posted Saturday at 07:41 PM Primer. It allows you to check for surface flaws (mold lines, dips, sanding scratches, etc.) before color, and allows for better adhesion of topcoats. Under yellows, oranges and reds I tend to use a white primer, while under darker colors I use a gray primer. Not a hard and fast rule but a general guideline. 1
Bill Anderson Posted Saturday at 08:30 PM Author Posted Saturday at 08:30 PM THANK YOU ALL !!! Seems pretty unanimous, so white primer it will be. No matter what my problem, you folks always come through. Thank You! 1
jaymcminn Posted Saturday at 10:50 PM Posted Saturday at 10:50 PM White primer will make yellow POP. Tamiya Camel Yellow over white primer... Tamiya Chrome Yellow over white primer... 3
Bill Anderson Posted 13 hours ago Author Posted 13 hours ago WOW !!! Those are some really outstanding models! FYI, I ordered the Tamiya white primer yesterday, so it is on its way. 1
peteski Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago If the paint you are using is plastic-safe (not "hot") and the plastic is white that I would skip the primer. Just prep the body and shoot the yellow paint. If you have to use primer with yellow body, use white primer for the reason mentioned in the earlier post. I avoid using primer whenever possible because it just adds another layer to the overall paint thickness (which, since model paint does not have "scale thickness" is already out-of-scale too thick).
mcs1056 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I'm with Pete on this. If I don't HAVE TO use a primer, I don't. I've had pretty good luck prepping bare plastic for paint only. I agree with him in that; Every layer of anything diminishes detail. Emblems on these things are small enough before we start. Having said that...sure looks like many here who do spray primer get better results than mine. I realize that this is, in no small part, due to my "newbieness." I defer to the experts.
espo Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago I suggest the use of gray primer to find any and hopefully all imperfections on the plastic surfaces. Should you be working with say a risen body an automotive primer would be a better choice. Only after the imperfections are corrected and before color coats is the time to decide which color primer you should use. This will depend on the finial color and remember the color of the primer can have an effect on the color shade of your finial color coat as everyone else has point out.
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