What are you using to dilute the paint with?
BTW no it's not an ink. Ink is ink.
--
rob singers
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Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Ummmmm... hard to say. Because I've never heard of anything quite like this
before and I've got wide experience using acrylic paint for washes. When
you say 'turns white' to do you mean all across the washed area or right at
the edge of the border between washed and 'unwashed'? Ocassionally I've
seen a tiny white line appear that seperates the two areas once the wash has
dryed, but it mostly occurs were the wash pooled in large quanties due to
the shape of the figure.
What brand of paint are you using and what sort of liquid (if it isn't just
water) are you using to make you stain?
Feel free to visit my website if your interested in my painting tips.
--
MJB
Mr. Tin's Painting Workshop:
http://web.newsguy.com/Mrtinsworkshop/
"m.santiago.f" <sith...@scififan.com> wrote in message
news:14f5936b.04062...@posting.google.com...
Thanks for all the help, I live in South america, so I can't buy Future here.
I use water to thin the paint. The white is in all the grooves
where it should be black, did I put too much on? thanks again
> Thanks for all the help, I live in South america, so I can't buy
> Future here. I use water to thin the paint. The white is in all the
> grooves where it should be black, did I put too much on? thanks again
Is it water from the tap or water that has been boiled? It sounds like
you've got some mineral in the water that is either reacting with the paint
or is precipitating out. I'd see if you can get yourself some distilled
water and try again. Or just by some ink froma stationer and use that
instead.