Andy in Germany
Guru
- Location
- Rottenburg am Neckar
Some thoughts on painting and finishing:
It is amazing how a small model can sometimes take as much time to do as the real thing .A late evening update...
Have primed the wheels and I can now see where I need to tweak things. I definitely did get better at building them as I went along!
On the downside, the paint scratches off with a fingernail. That's no real huhu at this stage, as all the wheels still need work to some degree or other. So I've caved in and just ordered the Tamiya light grey primer off Amazon. The blurb says for plastic and metal models, so this *should* cover all my bases.
If I'm going to do this, I may as well do it properly. Including the time spent scaling photos and doing design work, I've probably invested over a hundred hours in the project so far. Seems stupid to do things by halves, really...
Some thoughts on painting and finishing:
Some thoughts on painting and finishing:
It is amazing how a small model can sometimes take as much time to do as the real thing .
I wonder how many times he's dipped his brush into his coffee ?![]()
I wonder how many times he's dipped his brush into his coffee ?![]()
That's because much of the engineering and design work is still the same, regardless of the difference in scale.I'm actually really enjoying this side of the project, as it's "home turf" for me.
I have done that so many times while painting. Albeit in my case, it's tea, not coffee.
Maybe it's the third of three?![]()
I'll have a look at that, thanks.Need to achieve a scuffed finish on parts of the car where paint has gone down to bare metal and / or acquired paint from a different car, so ideas on how to do it are fabby.
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It is if you are an engineer to start with: most of that side of things is a deep mystery to me which is why I make "sketch" models.
It still takes ages though because I'm slow and procrastinate lots...
I'm not sure how well the sandpaper buffing will work on a card base: using the "hairspray method" on the three wheeled racing car had only limited success.
I'll probably sort out some test pieces and see what works and what doesn't. Failing that, I can always tackle it in the same way I'd do similar detail work on a painting i.e. with a dry brush, and holding it just below the ferrule so that I spread the hairs or bristles out.
Dry brushing is your friend for raised detail on a model. I'll have to try that hold on the next weathering project...
If it's coffee rather than tea it must smell awful- just like the real thing!I wonder how many times he's dipped his brush into his coffee ?![]()
All becomes clear!Oh, and I was sent this pic of a slightly later (1988 as opposed to 1984) car. That steel sheet is going to end up as a sump guard - and it shows you where that solid block of mine goes.
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