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Gloss varnish question


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If you're asking what do people use Gloss Varnish for, then in most cases it protects painted miniatures, especially when they're being used in games as picking them up, dropping them, shoving them around can chip or even wear away your nice paint job.  Another use for me is to apply over a painted mini before I apply a wash to help the wash flow away from flat surfaces like armour.  Some people also use it to make gems and things look more shiny.

  • Solution

Metallics tend to want a gloss rather than matte finish.

 

Gloss tends to be more hard-wearing. In some cases (including examples above) you want a gloss coat, then some other effect, then a final matte (or satin) coat as a finish.  

43 minutes ago, LameBeard said:

Metallics tend to want a gloss rather than matte finish.

 

Gloss tends to be more hard-wearing. In some cases (including examples above) you want a gloss coat, then some other effect, then a final matte (or satin) coat as a finish.  

Thanks, that's the answer imma looking for. 

One thing I’ll say for using gloss varnish for gems or eye lenses - don’t build in a tremendous (or any) shadows and light glints. The gloss will cause the object to shine and shade oddly against pre painted shadows and light glints, so you may have a bright spot in the area where you painted the shadows, or darkness reflected across where you painted up a light glint due to the room lighting reflecting off the gloss.

 

If you are using gloss varnish on gems and eye lenses, it often better (at least it looks better and reacts to the surroundings better) to do a darker defining area around the rim, and then let the gloss do the rest.

Edited by Bryan Blaire
52 minutes ago, gideon stargreave said:

Do you water it down? It’s so thick

I will if necessary, about 1:1 with a thinner/colorless medium, but it depends on what I’m doing. Different brands have different thicknesses and can be impacted differently by evaporation.

 

I use varnishes from non-GW sources - AK Interactive, Monument Hobbies/ProAcryl, and Vallejo are all good, but I know folks like some other brands too (I personally prefer AK and MH/ProAcryl’s offerings). I pitched all my GW mediums and varnishes except the Contrast Medium.

23 hours ago, Bryan Blaire said:

I will if necessary, about 1:1 with a thinner/colorless medium, but it depends on what I’m doing. Different brands have different thicknesses and can be impacted differently by evaporation.

 

I use varnishes from non-GW sources - AK Interactive, Monument Hobbies/ProAcryl, and Vallejo are all good, but I know folks like some other brands too (I personally prefer AK and MH/ProAcryl’s offerings). I pitched all my GW mediums and varnishes except the Contrast Medium.

thanks for the advice!

On 5/14/2025 at 12:46 PM, gideon stargreave said:

Do you water it down? It’s so thick

 

I thinned my 'ardcoat gw gloss by maybe 25-33% water, though I think it had thickened. It was drying streaky and I just added drops of water until it flowed more and left a smooth surface. 

Another thing to add is that gloss varnish is good for applying washes into recesses, known as pin washing.  The glossed surface is smoother (matte varnish is rougher), so the wash doesn't stick to the flat surfaces as much and flows better into the recesses.  The smoothness of the glossed surface is also why it works better for applying transfers over, as it helps prevent air from getting trapped under the transfer.  My normal workflow is airbrush base coats, gloss varnish, transfers and pin wash, gloss varnish again, matte varnish.

Also @Aarik, what are you using for the pin wash? I did gloss before my pin wash on some of my heresy world eaters but I’m not convinced it was worth the extra effort. 
 

And for anyone new to the thread, check what kind of gloss varnish you have. Adding water to some will just create a horrid mess, it has to be the right kind of thinner.

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