Saturday, 28 September 2013

HobbyBoss 1:35 scale RSOV

Ranger Special Operations Vehicle.








This kit did not come with figures so I adapted three US ww2 figures I had spare.
I also added extra fuel gerry cans, kit bags, tarps and chain.
The paintwork is pristine. It needs some battering, bruising, scuffing, scraping, weathering,  rust-spotting, muddying, making messy!  That's a job for another day.



Battle for Stalingrad





I have the Germans advancing up the track, unaware of the T34 hiding up behind the ruined farmhouse waiting for the perfect shot.

Friday, 2 August 2013

M*A*S*H

I had a spare Jeep set, same one as the US Jeep, France 1944 entry below.
(They were cheap, so I bought two!)

My apologies to any true M*A*S*H fans out there, I just wanted a little fun with this one.
I've not really bothered with fine detail - I just wanted to see what I could get onto one small 1/35 scale Jeep without making it look overcrowded!





Panzerspahwagen - The finished model

So, after making a few modifications as I mentioned in my last blog - raising the antenna, adding more detail, weathering, scuffs, stone chips, rust etc.  Plus additional kit, camo net roll and so on.

I called this set Hasty Repairs.






Thursday, 11 July 2013

Monogram 1/32 Panzerspahwagen Sd.Kfz.232

This is the box art for the kit I'm making:


I don't like the poses of the figures though.
The commander looks like he's dancing a jig, and the guy with the pipe??? No way!

So, I've made a few changes...
Commander is now in the turret, gone is the pith helmet, he's wearing headphones, and has radio and binoculars.



The pipe smoker is now armed and guarding the vehicle whilst the sausage frying guy is working on the engine.




I still have a multitude of details to attend to - straps and weapon slings to add/paint, rust spots, paint chips, plus adding the wheels, maybe raising the antenna so the commander can see better? 



Saturday, 29 June 2013

Airfix 1/76 40mm Bofors Gun & Tractor

I like this kit - always have, always will.
Currently £6.74 from eModels - excellent value!


This is what I made using this kit.












Tamiya 1/35 scale3.7cm Pak 36 anti tank emplacement

I started this and immediately knew what I wanted to do - I wanted the crew and Pak 36 in a ruined church - to command a section of road.



I used the Italeri 1/35 Church window and made the base myself using car body filler, crushed rubble bits, and so on.  However, I didn't like the sandbags at the front.  And this detail totally put me off!  There was something I didn't like about this scene, but I couldn't put my finger on it.  An example of one detail messing up the whole scene.

Once I removed the sandbags and filled the space with more rubble, I was much happier.

But this scene comes with a twist.
I was going to call this scene Friday 13th... Unlucky for Some.




Because someone wouldn't be going home...




LG 3000 Heavy Truck

I liked this old Mercedes - another 1/72 scale.
I used a cast of the base that comes with a different set - i used playdoh to make impressions, then used normal plaster-based filler.  This allowed me to flatten the base and add/remove detail easily.





Once again, the detail is dubious - not sure which part of my imagination the camouflage pattern came from - one I just made up because I liked the colours most likely.


Kubelwagen

This is a 1/72 scale reconnaissance set which I decided to change slightly.  I wanted a different scenario - with the kubelwagen being  recovered after going off road.


A friend did say the colouring was a bit... hmmm, what were his words? Unusual.
This was before I cared about details like that - I was just making models because I liked the idea.  I'm still like that now!


Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Weathering

I've been watching more tutorials on You Tube - these are all about weathering vehicles, and reading TankArt by Michael Rinaldi.

So, today I bought some plaster of Paris, hairspray, acrylics, toothpicks and cotton buds.

Next I resurrected the M113 I bought for the figures and desk - hacked off all the reusable parts like towing hausers, axe, sledgehammer etc, and butchered the bodywork to my hearts content.

The purpose is to practice my weathering techniques.  Mud spatters (acrylics and plaster flicked with toothbrush) mud build-up (pva glue and crushed chalks used as pigments dabbed into wheel wells etc), chipping (hence the hairspray) and streaking.

See the tutorials here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RckNMlvyjKo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gU01ZSgC9mo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hu3f-Jmf_
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyBsuK-M

These are excellent and go into great detail.







By mixing a little acrylic burnt umber with water and plaster of paris to a sloppy mixture, dabbing in an old toothbrush and dragging a thumb across the bristles to flick the mud-like paste across the vehicle.

It was hard to tell how much to add.  I've definitely overdone this!

Below shows some base grey and rust coloured paints.  Over this went two light coats of ordinary hairspray. Over the top of this goes the top coat, and when dry small sections are wetted and scrubbed with a toothbrush the hairspray dissolves revealing the paints underneath - this is a chipping technique.




Next I put a top coat and brushed off some with a toothbrush dipped in water to reveal the paint below.
This didn't come out as I wanted it to - and was a lot of scrubbing for a little reveal.



Again way too much mud splash!

I added some camo netting...



...which I made from these:



A normal dishcloth, soaked in PVA glue, painted in greens and browns, with the fake coarse turf added in patches.  Cut to size and draped over the vehicle and allowed to dry.

Finally, after adding some streaks or grime, build up of grime, decals, rust streaks and patches and some final painting details, here's the finished vehicle.