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BHThough this big guy is brand new—clean as a whistle and hasn’t even had the chance to breathe in a speck of dust—Old Wolf still decided to give him a proper bath.🛁
Why, you ask? Well—did you know that when making sofubi figures, factories often coat the mold with something called mold release agent? It’s kinda like the oil you spread in a pan before frying an egg—without it, the plastic sticks and ruins the whole batch. Factories hate that. 🍳
But think about it: if we don’t wash off that oily layer, the paint won’t stick properly. It’ll just float on the surface, maybe even crack and peel later. No matter how beautifully you paint it—boom! Wasted. So yes—we wash! Always wash!
This habit of mine? Came from a modeling textbook I read back in the ’90s. Been three decades, and I still live by it. Sure, it’s already 2025, and maybe factories use better stuff now… but Old Wolf believes in one thing: Better to wash three times than risk once.
And don’t think just because it looks dry on the outside, it’s ready for paint. These sofubi toys are hollow. They might look dry, but inside? Could be a puddle waiting to ruin your day. That’s when I summon my trusty sidekick—the dehumidifier—to give it a full inside-out drying spa. No mold, no mildew, no ghostly horror scenes.
So yeah, this whole wash-and-dry ritual might seem trivial, but to artists and craftsmen, it’s sacred. If you’re gonna do it, do it right—clean thoroughly, dry completely, paint beautifully.
🐺🎨 “Before painting a dragon, wash its scales. Before taming a beast, cleanse its skin. Old Wolf never skips the wash—ever.”
@bhf_godzilla_kaiju










