Paul Hannaby
Established Member
I use single action siphon feed airbrushes for spraying spirit dyes and for what you might call "blanket coverage" they are ideal. The ones I currently have cost me around £7 each and the oldest one is nearly 20 years old and still working! The others are much newer but of the same basic type. The advantage of these is the ability to have a different bottle for each colour and switching when needed. I bought some extra bottles when I bough the airbrush and have enough to have one for each colour I use and a few spares just in case.
I also have a couple of dual action gravity feed airbrushes for spraying various acrylic paints. One has a 0.2mm needle which is fine for airbrush paints such as Golden and Com-Art. The other has a 0.5mm needle which is better for the thicker paints such as those by Chestnut, Createx etc. Unless you are planning on painting fine detail, you don't need to break the bank when buying airbrushes. Check out this website for some reasonably priced kit. I have no connection, I'm just another customer.
For compressors, I used to use my big workshop compressor which worked fine but got fed up with lugging it around when I did demos so I bought a much more portable airbrush compressor (which is much quieter!) and now use that one instead.
I also have a couple of dual action gravity feed airbrushes for spraying various acrylic paints. One has a 0.2mm needle which is fine for airbrush paints such as Golden and Com-Art. The other has a 0.5mm needle which is better for the thicker paints such as those by Chestnut, Createx etc. Unless you are planning on painting fine detail, you don't need to break the bank when buying airbrushes. Check out this website for some reasonably priced kit. I have no connection, I'm just another customer.
For compressors, I used to use my big workshop compressor which worked fine but got fed up with lugging it around when I did demos so I bought a much more portable airbrush compressor (which is much quieter!) and now use that one instead.