Well, I am back after some time away from this one. I had a couple of ideas about the diorama (more to come), so with those thoughts in my head it is time to move on. First to mask the cockpit, the wheel wells, and put on the engine compartment panels to get ready for priming. As the panels don't fit real well, I have attached them with poster tack (which helped fill the gaps to protect the engine) and that will also make them easy to remove. I masked over the exhaust stacks as they had already been painted. Lastly, I was not sure about the upper end of the flaps. They are extended in my build, but would they have been painted the top color? I am not sure if the ground crews would paint with extended flaps and slats, or leave the under color? I decided to have a small strip of RLM02 where the flap would meet the wing. Masked and ready.
Primed with a mix of grey and panzer grey Vallejo acrylic primer. I then put down the white for the wing tips, engine/spinner, and the fuselage band. I also drilled out the spinner front for the cannon and the fuselage for the through tube.
Now for my diorama. The Afrika Korps has an area against an old adobe wall where they will be working on this bird. The base was a piece of heavy cardboard over which I brushed on some Liquitex Medium Matte Gel. I then took some fine dirt (living in Arizona I was able to find some "desert" dirt:)), and sprinkled it over the gel. When it dried I then sprayed some scenic cement from Woodland Scenics. I then filled in the areas needed with more dirt and a final spray of the cement.
For the wall, I took some old styrofoam packing material. It is the kind where it is made up of the small beads. The scale looked right, so I cut the two sections and then took a rough file and gouged out all over to simulate the wear. The foam was white, so to color it I took Apple Barrel acrylics from WalMart ( a whopping $1.00 a bottle), and mixed up some dirt colors. I added a touch of red to try to simulate the clay that might have been used. I white glued the wall sections to the base and then smoothed in dirt at the bottom. when it had all dried, I gave it a final coat of the scenic cement and the airbrushed Model Master sand until I got the final color. I added a couple of rocks as well.
I then needed some "equipment", so I scratch build a table and a work stand out of balsa wood. They were painted with Model Master wood, and then had some stain added with Windsor and Newton burnt sienna oils. The angles aren't perfect, but I figured they needed these and they didn't have time for a mitre box for all the cuts. What I mean is that it was too small to get it all square:)
Next up will be the yellow section on the 109, and then I can add the main colors.
John