Okay, here is my personal guideto color correcting kits. It is simply my own method, and others may do it differently. Many artists use various methods and 'combine' them, so if you can learn something from this, good! This also varies, of course, from kit to kit, and what you want your finished product to look like, but this is the general idea. If I missed something or got something wrong, please correct me.
Orange vinyl (like some playdolls and Berenguers): 2 thin flesh layers first. Then a couple of thinned out blue washes, or more if needed (depending on how orange the vinyl is). Using a more purplish blush is also a good idea.
Yellow vinyl (like Secrist vinyl): 2 thin flesh layers first. Then a thinned out blue wash, followed by a thinned out purple wash. If that's still not enough, another thinned out blue wash. Blushing should be more purple/pink rather than orange.
Purple vinyl (like some BB pink kits): 2 thin flesh layers first. Then a thinned out mint green wash, possibly two. I also like to do a thinned out rusty red wash, too. At least one yellow wash, most often two. Blushing should be more orangy.
Pink vinyl (like BB pink kits): 2 thin flesh layers first. Thinned out mint green wash, most often two. If it's more pink/purple, then a very thinned out rusty red wash. If very pink, then a purplish wash. One or two yellow washes. Blushing should be more orangy.
Grayish vinyl (like BB peach kits): 2 thin flesh layers first. Then 2-3 yellow washes. A rusty red wash is also a good idea. Depending on age of baby, orange or pink blushing.
Mixes of vinyl color: Use the various formulas together. Go slowly and take a good look before doing another wash.
Exactly what washes you do varies on the exact color of the vinyl, but this gives you a good general idea. All the washes should be very thinned out, so thin that you should barely be able to tell the difference. Basically, you are trying to neutralize the color. If you 'over-neutralize' and make it grayish, follow the directions for gray vinyl. Have fun and remember that every baby is different, every skintone is different, and you are making a one-of-a-kind baby. You can adjust it to fit what YOU want the baby to look like. I hope this mini-tutorial is helpful.
Disclaimer: this information is if you use her "personal" technique, not to be confused with the "Secrist method" of reborning. I had to put this in as Secrist does not use this method of applying paints. Thanks for your understanding... The moderator
-- Edited by Buffington on Saturday 14th of March 2009 03:46:37 AM
-- Edited by Miss Reborner on Saturday 14th of March 2009 02:10:49 PM
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God Bless You, Andrea D.
'Andrea's Dream Babies: giving every mommy a chance to hold the babies of their dreams . . . forever.' See my website at: www.freewebs.com/andreasdreambabies
I put a disclaimer at the bottom of your post to distinguish between "your" method and "Secrist's" method. Hope everyone will read this and realize they are different. Secrist teaches to use the "color correction" color mixed in with the very first foundation layer (just a little toothpick tip of it) but still put it on thinly, instead of the thick method you use. Just a difference in technique.
Okay, that's fine, Pat. I didn't know that there even was a Secrist method, since I haven't ever bought any dvd's or tutorials from them. It might be something good to try out, though. I edited the above post to clarify that this is simply my method and others may do it somewhat differently, too. And also I wanted to clarify the 'thick' flesh paint. While it is thick compared to the thinned out washes, it is not all that thick. Genesis works best in thinner layers, as you know. I just usually make sure the first flesh is thick enough to make the vinyl color a little lighter, and you have to get some everywhere. I edited the above post to say that maybe 2 thinner layers of flesh would be better. Thank you for the tip.
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God Bless You, Andrea D.
'Andrea's Dream Babies: giving every mommy a chance to hold the babies of their dreams . . . forever.' See my website at: www.freewebs.com/andreasdreambabies
Oh you're welcome hun. Ya, everyone has their own ways and methods. I am actually a Secrist factory certified teacher. Went all the way to Michigan to take certification classes!
I think you might like the classroom training dvds and the special reborn encyclopedia. You might find something you didn't know ;)
Oie miss Estou com um kit RDK muito rosa, como fazer uma lavagem bem clara verde ? Axo que estou errando na quantidade e não esta dando certo , queria juntar o kit com uma barriguinha da secrist mas não estou conseguindo neutralizar o rosa do kit. me da um help??? Obrigada de Paula
Si, el verde va a funcionar bien. Tal vez tienes que usar mas que un lavagem.
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God Bless You, Andrea D.
'Andrea's Dream Babies: giving every mommy a chance to hold the babies of their dreams . . . forever.' See my website at: www.freewebs.com/andreasdreambabies
Thank you so much for that colour guide.. I have been asking this question for a long time. I have some thing to work with now.. My light kits no matter how much I tried would never had the results I wanted.. I still had the underneath vinyl colour..Having no artistic background it's been trial and error all the way.. Thanks a million now I have something to work with.. Much appreciated Chrisxx
Hello, I'm new to reborning and am wondering if you bake after applying each flesh layer then adding the green washes. I've never done a green wash to any of the kits I've done. Can the Green be mixed with Genisis heat set paints 5 basic colors or do I need to purchase the paint already made?
When using the Genesis, Authentic Reborn, or pretty much any polymer based paints like them, you will always bake after each layer. This makes the layer under each other one you add permanent.
Yes, my preferred method is to mix the pthalo green with the flesh paints. That way you get the orange colorcorrected color and base paint all in one. But only use a small toothpick tip of the green or you might end up with a greentoned baby :o
Hey girls! what about dd kits? do they need to be neutralized? i have a feeling they do...what do you think? no matter what i do i always get almost the same "looks" on all my dd babies
Any advice or comments on this kind of vinil is gold to me!
Thank you ladies :)
-- Edited by Buffington on Thursday 17th of December 2009 06:22:33 AM
I have several DD kits and they don't need to be neutralized. My Ariella is great. So is my Benjamin. I even do the internal wash on them as they are as close to Secrist as you can get (IMHO). Also they are the German vinyl which is a higher standard of industry regulations than the USA. I bake them in my home oven (those and Secrist are the only ones though).
I usually do a slight blue wash on my DD kits, or an internal wash, which helps take the edge of the orange tone off. But they are pretty close.
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God Bless You, Andrea D.
'Andrea's Dream Babies: giving every mommy a chance to hold the babies of their dreams . . . forever.' See my website at: www.freewebs.com/andreasdreambabies
Whether I neutralize depends on how "orangey" the vinyl looks. At some point, I do add the blu-ish wash in the areas that normally have sort of a periwinkle undertone. Some artists say that they alternate their layers by following swarm tone with cooler colors.
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Linda Dreyer~ Forum Moderator Secrist Certified Newborning Teacher & Dealer Apple Valley DW Dealer Play Days Dolls & Collectibles PlayDaysDolls.com (Current Avatar: Erinfrom Secrist Dolls)