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Rainbow Roll Turboshift Acrylic Paint

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The rainbow roll was born in Little Tokyo in Los Angeles in the 1960s. Some 60 years later the paint was created a few blocks away in the Arts District. 

As an homage to the original, Rainbow Roll features a smorgasbord of complex colors — red, green, blue, orange, and yellow over black. Be careful, though, or you might find yourself staring down into the abyss.

The No BS Guarantee

issue with your order or the product doesn't spark joy? We'll happily refund you within 90 days of delivery.

The Best Bottle in the Hobby

  • Clear PET plastic shows off our paints better than ever.
  • Nozzle tip clips into the bottle so it won’t pop off when squeezed.
  • Flat nozzle tip keeps mixing ball from falling in and blocking it.
  • New floating seal in the cap tightens down onto the nozzle to prevent dripping.
  • When finished using the paint, push down while turning to reseal the cap using the floating seal.

New Label who dis?

  • Better instructions and clearly listed required undercoat color.
  • Universal Color Language explanations of what the paint color or shift effect looks like. Great for customers who are color blind. Kudos to Army Painter for beating Turbo Dork to the punch on this, but honestly every manufacturer should be doing this.
  • Batch code stamping.

Remix 2.0 Formula

  • The mad scientists at Turbo Dork have doubled the pigment in more than half of the line.
  • Much better hand brush feel and better coverage in less coats. This also extends to airbrushing, in most cases you only need two coats now.
  • The 72 returning colours match their Turbo Dork 1.0 colours. Redrum is still Redrum, Blue Raspberry is still Blue Raspberry!
  • Shorter drying time!

FAQ

Like acrylics from other companies, they are fast-drying, water-soluble when wet, and water-resistant when dry.

However, they have their own set of distinct properties due to the type of pigments used and the unique formulation of the acrylic medium.

Metallics contain pigments and small mica flakes that sparkle the paint's surface, making it look like metal.

Both!

The first set of Turbo Dork paints was designed for use in an airbrush so the formulation was rather thin.

Then, as the paints became more popular and more paints were added to the line, the formulation was changed to better accommodate hand-brushing.

What happened, however, was that some paints ended up thicker than others. This was due to the unique mixture of pigments and medium plus additives that go into each colour.

When airbrushing, pretty much any acrylic-based thinner should work.

However, it is recommended that you use an airbrush medium to thin with. The Turbo Dork folks use Golden Airbrush Medium. Others have reported using flow improver as well to great effect, but we recommend using a flow improver in addition to an airbrush medium, not on its own. We do not recommend thinning with just water alone, at least for airbrushing.

At Exit 23 Games, we use Vallejo Airbrush Thinner and Flow Improver.

The bottom line is that no one set formula for diluting for airbrushing works for all colours.

For most colours, folks start with a ratio of 2 parts paint to 1 part medium. However, you will have to use your own judgement.

Some internet references say that the thickness of the paint should be the consistency of milk — you can go with that if it helps.

To be used for hand-brushing, paint is a little easier to accommodate.

Most colours are fine from the bottle. However, some are thicker than one might like and can be thinned with an airbrush medium, contrast medium, Lahmia medium, or by gently adding small amounts of water with a wet brush to the paint on a palette.

Turbo Dork metallic paints work fairly independently of the base colour, so putting them over something besides black will not surprise you. The finished product may not be as intense over a lighter-coloured base.

Please note that painting something dark like Cool Ranch or People Eater over white takes some patience to get even coverage.

As with everything in life, there are a few exceptions, metallic paint-wise, where the recommendation for primer is white. The pastels (Taro, Yuzu, Momo, Maguro, Sakura, and Matcha).

These other metallics (Curacao, Multipass, Pearly Gates, Pucker, and Absinthe). You can put this latter set of paints over black instead of white, but they will lose their soft, pale tone and take on a deeper colour.

Whether you are using an airbrush or hand-brushing, apply multiple thin, even coats and let the paint dry thoroughly between coats. Do not use a single thick coat. This can obscure the turboshift effect. If the paint pools or you see thin white areas, you put it on too thick.

For Metallics, 2 coats are usually enough to get good coverage and good sparkle.

It is hard, but try to think about Turbo Dork paints having a “normal” paint surface.

Dry brushing, feathering, stippling, layering, and highlighting, as well as washes, glazes, shades, inks, and even contrast colours work well.

How to use

Shake a lot. Like more than you think.

Make sure the tip is clear before you squirt. Our bottles feature removable dropper tips, this allows you to save unused paint by pouring it back into the bottle.

Use the appropriate base coat colour. The bottles say which base coat is best for said colour. But generally, most Turboshifts and metallics look best over a black undercoat.

Apply in 2-4 thin layers. Do not try to apply in one layer. Do not allow the paint to cool. Allow each coat to fully dry before applying the next.

Turboshifts may be layered over each other, but not mixed together when wet.

Gloss washes work best on Turbo Dork paints. Finish with a satin or gloss varnish to protect if desired.

Please send us pictures of what you paint to info@exit23.games