tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5077773.post7750928499187162324..comments2024-03-26T15:22:25.095-06:00Comments on The Earliad: Yellow CorvegaEarl J. Woodshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07963936256606285358noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5077773.post-24493827428205611972021-08-02T22:33:46.312-06:002021-08-02T22:33:46.312-06:00Time to introduce you to the "pounce" te...Time to introduce you to the "pounce" technique. Pounce is traditionally used to transfer a drawing onto a painting surface. You take vellum tracing paper, draw your image on it, and then prick a million tiny holes along your lines. You put the vellum on your surface and pounce it with a bag filled with fine chalk. The chalk goes through the dots and you are left with a ghostly image of your drawing. <br /><br />That will do you no good because your car is so small. But you could hit it directly with a fine sponge or a small teabag loaded with just a tiny amount of your paint. It's more like dry-brush than sponging, and it should hide your brush strokes, which are showing.<br /><br />Or, to eliminate brush strokes, use less paint on your brush but do more coats. Brush more across the contour of your model, diagonally one way then diagonally the other in overlapping X- or Z-shaped patterns. Try to avoid brushing along the contour. Jeff Shylukhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11915415377502782962noreply@blogger.com