Jump to content
 

Railmatch yellow acrylic - lemony?


Recommended Posts

I've laid a few coats of railmatch warning yellow onto a white undercoat on my latest project, and it's come out quite cold and lemony.

 

I wonder how much is due to the fact the body (that will ultimately end up rail blue) is undercoated grey, so the contrast (and the overspray into areas that will end up rail blue and thus not undercoated white) is contributing, or whether this is a known thing.

 

I gave it about 3 light coats over white. I'm going to let it set and give it another coat in an hour or so I think, but would be interested to get some thoughts.

Edited by Lacathedrale
Link to post
Share on other sites

It may or may not have something to do with it but are you using:

 

early warning panel yellow... https://howesmodels.co.uk/product/warning-panel-yellow-15ml-enamel/

intermediate...  https://howesmodels.co.uk/product/warningengineers-yellow-15ml-enamel/

current...  https://howesmodels.co.uk/product/warning-yellow-15ml-enamel/

 

There are some distinctly differing shades between the three...

Link to post
Share on other sites

I'm using acrylic rather than enamel, it doesn't specify an era. That said, I added a little golden yellow which has a much better pigmentation and it was more warm, then went back over with a very light cream to fade it back. I think it looks swish now! Thank you, I didn't realise there were multiple shades!

 

Edit: here's a pic but I staged the wrong yellow, I used coat d'arms "golden yellow"!

post-32628-0-89144700-1540934654_thumb.jpg

Edited by Lacathedrale
  • Like 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

  • RMweb Gold

Hi FWIW looking at livery diagrams at work a while back I found that there are 5 acceptable RAL / pantones for rail yellow warning panels- varying from a lemony yellow to a warm yellow. Add to this fading on an old livery, grime, chemicals used to clean then it really is down to personal choice.  Photos while helping are false friends as shown on many threads with other colours, age of pic how it was developed, let alone PC screen variations to say nothing of the MK1 eyeball and interpretation...

 

Go with what feels right to you

 

Robert     

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...