Tools necessary for the beginner:
1.) A hobby knife
2.) Assorted rubber bands: Great for holding odd shaped parts while glue dries.
3.) Fine grit sand paper: The metal variety is better in my opinion.
4.) One six- inch ceramic tile: Very useful to glue on, any spills can easily be scraped off with a hobby knife when dry.
5.) Various small boxes: Make a loop in masking tape, sticky side out to hold parts for painting.
6.) Masking tape
7.) Tweezers: For grasping truly small objects
8.) Small plastic bowl: Great for water when applying water type decals.
9.) Toothpicks: both round and flat to apply glue in small areas.
10.) Small side cutting pliers: Used to cut parts from plastic parts trees.
11.) Paint brushes: sizes from 00 up to a medium fine
12.) Paper towels
13.) Clothespins: Also handy for holding objects for gluing or painting.
These items are relatively cheap or free in some cases, and can be picked up over time as needed. I'm always on the lookout for small boxes or plastic bottles that will work in different applications. By small I mean small enough to fit under a model car body and smaller.
Hobby knives come in a variety of sizes and you can expand on your collection later. The smaller Aluminum one with the changeable blade will do most every thing you need it to do for now.
A note on sandpaper: The thin metal variety works well with plastic and can be cleaned without destroying it, just lightly wipe it on a heavy rag and it will last much longer. Also the thinner varieties fold smaller, which allows you to sand in tight areas as well.
When sanding plastic, finer is usually better. As coarse-grained paper will scratch the plastic and cause more sanding to need done.
The side cutters are used to cut parts off the plastic "trees." Anyone who has ever tried to cut them with a knife or bend them off knows the awful results they end up with. The six-inch size is perfect for nearly all your plastic modeling needs.
Masking tape comes in an assortment of sizes luckily for us. One roll in a one-inch width will work wonders for now, various other widths will no doubt prove handy as well in time.
Assorted rubber bands are always needed to hold small items like engines while gluing, thinner ones work well here, as they tend to break before exerting too much pressure on the item you are working with.
Clothespins of the wooden variety are one of the cheapest clamping devices out there, and they can be trimmed to smaller dimensions when necessary. Being wood its possible to add width or length to achieve any needed size.
Model paint comes in nearly every imaginable shade, is available in small bottles for brushing and spray cans for larger areas. It is also available in water based or the more prominent oil based paint, thinner will be needed for oil paint to clean brushes, fingers and spills.
Published by Thomas H Forthe
A life long passion for reading the written word, a longing to contribute a few of my own, and the agony of being held at arms length by life in all its varying dependencies that refused to allow it for so m... View profile
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4 Comments
Post a Commenti want to known in details steps, tecniques, uses of making plastic modelling.
This is helpful for anyone planning to start model building. It is too bad that more people do not encourage model building instead of the constant playing games on electronic equipment. When you actually build a model you have something lasting that you can have for a long time. I still have a red model car from about 40 years ago that my red headed boy built for me. It is somewhat falling apart, but still is something that I value.
Another wonderful article. I enjoy everything you write. Tnank you.
My grandson recently started taking an interest in this. He is out growing the Legos and such...nice tips, Thomas!