The workbench never normally looks this clear |
A small area is all that many of us
have so we make the most of it. For a long time I had about three
feet on window sill and a box to put my paints in. This wasn't ideal
but it worked for me. Over time, this got to be inadequate for my
needs in not an outright hindrance when I paint.
The central feature is the mug. Tea not coffee. I'm English but don't hold that against me. I was thinking of giving all my project a brew rating from one to five. depending on how lon they take.
The central feature is the mug. Tea not coffee. I'm English but don't hold that against me. I was thinking of giving all my project a brew rating from one to five. depending on how lon they take.
When I eventually acquired too much
stuff just to leave it on the table, I had to look for something
better.
There are a number of systems for sale. These seem relatively expensive for what they are. Many are geared up to the paints of a particular manufacturer. If this works for you, fantastic. My advice would be to go with what work for you, every time but this wasn't for me.
The first step was to rebuild some shelves to get the paints of the table, this quickly turned into two shelves. The second shelf was designed to work a bit differently. As well as having some space for paints, it became a space to store other resources, big paint pots and a place where half completed projects could hide in plain sight.
There are a number of systems for sale. These seem relatively expensive for what they are. Many are geared up to the paints of a particular manufacturer. If this works for you, fantastic. My advice would be to go with what work for you, every time but this wasn't for me.
The first step was to rebuild some shelves to get the paints of the table, this quickly turned into two shelves. The second shelf was designed to work a bit differently. As well as having some space for paints, it became a space to store other resources, big paint pots and a place where half completed projects could hide in plain sight.
My main workspace is a 45cm (18”) x 60cm (24”) cutting mat so I decided to work everything
around it. Over the years I have replaced the mat twice and something consistently at the core of what I do is
always a bonus. I looked for a commercial alternatives and decided
that they were still not for me.
Given the dimensions of the mat I opted
to buy some wood and get it cut to fit around it. I mainly use
Games Workshop paints which have many incarnations in pot size. I
also use Revel, Vallejo and Humberol acrylics.
Privateer P3 paints and those in similar jars should nicely along
side the older GW paints. If you use paints from Vallejo or
battleground or any squeeze pot paint they are all identical in shape the
shelves are marginally smaller. The bases are all fairly close in terms of absolute dimensions.
Either way you require pieces of wood
that fit the shapes needed. I have found that 34mm x 44mm or 44mm x
44mm work well and they have a pretty much
uninterrupted view of the colours in the pots. 44mm x 44mm even allow the
revel paints to be laid on their side so the labels can be seen and
even Tamiya fit on well. These are also the sizes you will find
available at all good DIY shops.
A word from the wise, think big when
you build your own workbench. Use all the space you have. I put this
set up together a few years ago and I am already looking to expand
the set-up. When I get round to improving my workbench, I'll publish some pictures.
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