Hey all, I dunno if this has been discussed before, or if maybe this should be in the vintage section, but I have a general question about Japanese vinyl: Why is so much of Japanese vinyl cast Flesh colored vinyl? Looking through the Mook I see so much vintage stuff thats flesh underneath the paint. Then I think about stuff like the Flesh RxH sets, Kinnikuman, M1 unpainted reproductions- Is there a reason behind the decision to use flesh vinyl? I did search for this but the results are so varied. Anyone have any insight? thanks, Phil
I'd assume all the neo-kaiju/fight stuff in flesh is a straight homage to the vintage classics. I have no clue on the classics though. Maybe it was cheaper back than? Or just an easier base color to paint whatever they wanted over? My guess is either costs, availability or practicality to paint over. Good question, I'm interested too.
It's because most of the companies (like Obitsu) use their equipment to make dolls, so they usually have a lot of flesh-colored raw materials on hand.
Oh! That makes sense, I didn't even think of that. Well that solves that mystery, doesn't it? =) thanks, Phil
Also seem to remember Lash and/or Kirkland mentioning 'flesh' vinyl tends to be easier to paint... of course my brain might be wrong.
I figured it had something to do with practicality. Whenever it's a question of "why" with the vintage stuff, it always seems to be. Thanks Roger.
I don't know about this one, all colors of vinyl I've painted are pretty much the same in terms of paint adhesion when you're painting them, its just that the color underneath will show through thin coats and effect the color- So if you were painting yellow vinyl with blue paint, the first coat might appear green depending on thickness of the coat. That being the case, I would say white is the easiest to paint. phil
Some questions answered about vinyl, including "long pork:" http://movies.groups.yahoo.com/group/Go ... sage/36347