It's tough sometimes to determine when a model is considered "done" or "good".
My current case in point is a Revell PT-109 model kit. Every time I looked at it, both before and after it was supposedly "done", I'd find myself wondering "What else can I add to it?"
Which led to the following add-ons:
Handmade depth charge racks and depth charges, installed forward of the deckhouse at the deck edges.
Curved handrails circling each machine gun turret, with mounts and rails made from stretched sprue.
A complete re-working of the miserably inadequate Carley float included with the kit, to include a thatched floor, new paddles, supply canister, water cask, first-aid kit, and battle lantern.
Reworking of the kit-supplied machine guns, with charging levers, elevation handles, and belt feeds.
Addition of reinforcing cables for the signal mast, as well as the addition of halyards for signal flags.
A flak helmet for the JFK figure. It bothered me that he was the only figure in the kit that didn't have one. It now sits on the ledge atop the cockpit door to the charthouse.
A pair of binoculars, made from bits of stretched sprue and scrap strip plastic, now emplaced atop the instrument panel next to the compass binnacle. Very tiny!
Three extra life jackets, and two flak helmets, made from Milliput. And added to the hand rails atop the dayroom. Again, very tiny!
Fortunately, I had plenty of sprue material and plastic scrap left over from previous modeling projects. And since I'm on a fixed budget, I didn't have any real money to invest in aftermarket sets to enhance the model.
And all of this in blindness-inducing 1/72 scale. I gave my Opti-Visor and reading glasses a real workout on this kit.
I think I can pretty much call it done, but now I have to work on the ocean base to display it on.
But yeah, it's hard for me to call a model done. Not because I'm a rivet counter, or a BB stacker, but I just look for the things that can be fixed, and cheaply.
Good topic- let's hear some more viewpoints on this.
Thanks!
Randy