wildfowl-carving.com

Painting a Cork Pintail Hen

These time-tested methods work.

By: Jim Higgins
Painting a Cork Pintail Hen

Although I made my first cork decoys in 1974, my decoy-making career really began in 1985 when my mentor, Charles F. Murphy (Working Plans for Working Decoys), passed away. During the 36 years that followed I have made and sold nearly a thousand hunting decoys, most of them with cork bodies. I don’t recall exactly when I painted my first decoy with an airbrush and templates, the method I will use in this tutorial. I do have a hen mallard decoy with similar paint in my rig that is dated 1994. I recently had one in the shop for a repaint that was dated 1992. In any event, I have fine-tuned my methods over many years and have had sufficient cash flow to buy and experiment with every kind of paint, airbrushes, and other tools. I have thoroughly tested the materials and methods detailed here. To see how I carve a cork bird, read my article about carving a cork mallard in the Fall 2019 issue. Take from this article what you need for the painting. Do not hesitate to contact me if you have questions about the methods, products, or tools I use. Happy painting!

YOUR RECENTLY VIEWED ARTICLES

Free tutorials, expert tips, exclusive partner offers, and more straight to your inbox!

Reviews

I have not made this yet so I cannot rate it.

Include a Photo Include a Photo

Click the button above or drag and drop images onto the button. You can upload two images.

Cancel Reply to Comment

Thanks for your comment. Don't forget to share!

Close

Report Inappropriate Comment

Are you sure you would like to report this comment? It will be flagged for our moderators to take action.

Thank you for taking the time to improve the content on our site.

Sign In to Your Account

Close Window
Sign In with one of your Social Accounts
Facebook Twitter
OR
Sign In using Email and Password