
also, does anybody else hate it when you put something up on ebay, set a starting price, arbitrarily set a "buy it now" price, and when someone buys-it-now within ten minutes of listing it, think "dammit. Aimed too low"? Just happened to me


I usually put a clear matt varnish on top, then go round the edges of the decal with the base colour of the armour.Dekana wrote: I can still see a small seam where the decal ends though. What's a good way to obscure that?
I heard a clear paint (lahmian medium) works, but can anyone confirm or provide another suggestion?

Thanks, I'll give that a try!Primarch wrote:I usually put a clear matt varnish on top, then go round the edges of the decal with the base colour of the armour.
It's not perfect, but it helps.
Once I get the decal on the model, I brush on a bit of decal setting fluid. It softens and takes some of the edge off. That an a matt varnish/spray ought to do it.Dekana wrote:Thanks, I'll give that a try!Primarch wrote:I usually put a clear matt varnish on top, then go round the edges of the decal with the base colour of the armour.
It's not perfect, but it helps.
This is my "pro tip" too. Vallejo sells Decal Medium, and there's a product called MicroSol that I don't know how available it is here in Japan, but both of them are basically very weak solvents that melt the decal a little - it softens the edges and also helps the decal fit to non-smooth surfaces. After you hit it with the varnish / sealant of your choice, the edges are basically invisible.Konrad wrote:Once I get the decal on the model, I brush on a bit of decal setting fluid. It softens and takes some of the edge off. That an a matt varnish/spray ought to do it.Dekana wrote:Thanks, I'll give that a try!Primarch wrote:I usually put a clear matt varnish on top, then go round the edges of the decal with the base colour of the armour.
It's not perfect, but it helps.