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Saturday, 11 April 2026

Matt, Gloss or Somewhere Inbetween?

 Wasn’t Matt Gloss the drummer in Bros? Anyway…

A few years back I had an exchange with Andy Copestake (Old Glory UK) which was sparked by his wonderful ‘Shinyloo’ project. It was about how some figures suited the shiny better than others and we both agreed this was the case. I actually think this can be simplified by ‘new figures and post-1900’ for Matt and ‘Old Skool’ for Gloss. Having said that, scale plays a part too!

The simplest way to approach this is to trial on a couple of figures and decide what works best for you, as your opinion on your toys overrides everybody else’s. For my WSS stuff it was a no-brainer and Matt was the way to go. I now use AK as it gives the flattest Mattest I know. It’s designed for airbrushes, but paints on well and you don’t need much.

And that completes my Cloggies!

So, here is my quick guide on when to shine and when to flatten. And the inbetweenies.

Gloss: All pre-1900 Minifigs, Hinchliffe, Hinton Hunt (and similar), Airfix Type 1, Connoisseur, Warrior.

Matt: Everything post-1900, ships, aeroplanes, all ranges dating from the 1980s onwards not by Peter Gilder, all plastics.

Satin: All pre-1900 figures under 15mm. Trust me, it works.


7 comments:

  1. All gloss for my mid-18th century toys. A highly pleasing, Gilderesque look that seems to make the colors pop even more.

    Kind Saturday Regards,

    Stokes

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  2. Totally agree with the gloss threshold. I re-based all of those plastic ACWs in 2020 and hit them with the gloss - brings new life to them; same with my 20mm Napoleonics...I also have a burgeoning collection of 54mm Napoleonics which get the gloss treatment. It makes a HUGE difference.
    I'm glad someone finally put dates to the gloss threshold :)

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    1. When I get round to doing my Airfix ACW - hoping to start in August - they will be glossier than Mr Shiny McShineface, winner of this year’s Mr Shinyverse competition.

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  3. Yes I would tend to agree with this- none of my tanks are shiny! I have 2 other 'shiny' collections as well as 'Shinyloo' an ECW one which is mostly Hinchliffewith some units once belonging to Peter Gilder and Duncan McFarlane and an AWI one which are almost entirely Stadden 30mm. None of my 15mm or 40mm are shiny nor are any of my other armies. Shiny IMHO has to fit the soldiers

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    1. Hi Andy! Oddly enough, Newline 20mm Napoleonics work very well with a glossy coat, which proves your point that it is down to the figure.

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    2. I can see them looking rather tasty. I keep thinking about a pair of 20mm matched armies but can't take a decision on which period..

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