Ready to spray is with a .5 nozzle.
You're running a .2
Extremely fine detail is definitely possible w this brush and people often thin as much as 30 drops of reducer to a single drop of paint. Avoiding spiders is all in practice.
The lines I see tell me the paint is too thick and won't come out til you've pulled the trigger a good ways back and then spatters at the edges.
Could be wrong but all I have to go off of is a picture so it's just my best guess.
You aren't getting any bubbles in the cup are you?
The only other thing I can think of is the nozzle isn't seating well... But you'll get air bubbles in the paint cup if that the case.
Chapstick at it's base will fix that if so.
I practise on paper towel, so I don't waste money on t-shirts. There is no way you can get spiders on paper towel Maybe if you use 1 drop of paint and 30 drops of reducer with high psi -.-He uses food coloring and a paper towel. Thin lines are a product of control, paint type, viscosity, air pressure. All of us have just about thrown our airbrushes through the wall in frustration trying to get hyper detail.
I didn't won't to nag and it won't happen again. But I do like to post dragonsI'm just a little bit concerned about the constant nagging for introductions here, unfortunately introduction threads just like every other thread soon disappear under a blanket of many many newer threads and ably a visit to a user's profile would help to find any introduction made by that user, many people logging on here for the first time do so because they have an issue which they think needs addressing and they seek urgent help, so the last thing on their minds is an introduction, it's nice when they do but not entirely necessary.
It woukd be far better for new users to take a few moments to edit their prifiles and signatures with their approximate locations, art preferences and equipment since all this shows all around the window containing each post they make, if you look at Robbie's posts above and anywhere else for that matter we can all see at a glance his location and what equipment he uses, thats what I would rather encourage with an introduction simply being optional for a new user should they wish to provide more information than they already have.
If a user asks a question, under their avatar and their signature are first places I look, if the same user has 1000 posts I definitely will not root through them all to find more information, if a user has no information anywhere and is vague about their current issues I will either ask for more information relative to their issues or just not respond at all.
Notice that Robbie will go out of his way to to respond to someone in need whether that person has posted an introduction or not, like me, he understands the urgency that caused a new user to log on just hoping for a solution to a problem they might struggling with, I think that is more of what the forum is about.
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