![]() Really you only need to match the base colour as blended highlights/shadows with an airbrush (if you're doing those) will either stand out as different from the rest of the army (if they're hardlined or washed) or blend in well enough to work so long as the base colour is right. The paints range contain Matt acrylic colors, water-based and especially formulated for airbrushing. It's kind of annoying to get the consistency right but if colour matching is important to you it's the only real way. The Model Air color range contains a selection of the military colors used in recent history, including the colors from WWI, WWII and up to the present day. If you are trying to match it to an army that was started with GW paints I would continue to use GW paints thinned accordingly in the airbrush. I just started a new army using the Model Air paints so I don't have a concern with matching GW colours and personally this is the way to go with a new army. Vallejo makes three primary paint ranges, one of which is formulated for straight out of the bottle airbrushing. Neither of those lists contain the Model Air colour range only the Model Colour and Game Colour ranges.
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