April 1, 2022
Which, of course, means something needs to go wrong. And it did!
For the red camo spots, I chose a mixture of XF-7 (Red) and XF-9 (Hull Red). And didn't note done the exact mixture, as I had more than enough in my airbrush's paint bucket.
I wanted the camo to look field-applied, so I didn't bother masking the hull up and went with freehand camo. Another first for me, by the way. And I think it shows. A bit too much, actually, with how spray-y the edges are. Too many little paint dots for my liking.
It also didn't help that paint was leaking out of the hole for the paintbrush trigger. I guess the bucket might have been too full, but at some point (after I had removed the piece of paper that kept the paint from spilling, thinking the leaking had stopped), a bit blotch of paint leaked, reached the needle and utterly FLOODED the hull's right forward corner. Thus, I had to make that camo splotch much, much bigger than I wanted to.
To add insult to injury, I messed up mixing the highlight color. So, I know that you cannot simply lighten any color using some shade of white without potentially messing up the color. So, I SHOULD have used the pure red color to lighten my mixture. What did I use? XF-55, Deck Tan. A freaking shade of white.
Of course, my paint turned out much too pink. Not that it mattered, because from this point on, it simply refused to come out of the airbrush in anything but tiny splatter, unless I cranked the trigger open so much that I would have instantly flooded the surface in a wide radius.
Overall an VERY unpleasant evening.