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Think I'm finally finding my way

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  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Wednesday, August 29, 2012 10:01 AM

EasyMike

Judges are members of the "In" Crowd.

Smile

 

Judges are pulled from the host chapter and then the attendees are asked, sometimes begged, to help. I guarantee that if a non-"in crowd" modeler walked up to the organizers' table and volunteered to be a judge, that they would be put to work immediately. No experience? Then they'd have you assist another volunteer judge to learn pointers on what to look for. Next show you go to you'd be as experienced as any "in crowd" judge. And if you're a car guy who shows up at an IPMS event and volunteers to help judge, you'd probably be made head judge for the automotive category on the spot.

Bottom line, there are never enough judges available at most local shows. Ever wonder why it takes so long to do the judging? That's because there aren't enough judges judging all the excellent models on the tables.

When judges look at the dozen or so entries, normally the first look cuts the wheat from the chaff. That is, find the kits with the most basic errors (large, nasty gun tube seam, crooked tracks, gap in hull, etc.) and then concentrate on the remainder. A perfectly built, factory finished, minimally weathered kit will win over a heavily weathered, battle worn, crappy build every time.

Personally, I've spent so many tired hours in the freezing cold, and darkness of the morning hours trying to get actual tanks to look pretty for inspection so I tend to prefer building clean models with minimal weathering.

Also with gobs of mud and weathering, I often wonder what errors the builder was trying to hide.

  • Member since
    March 2008
  • From: The Bluegrass State
Posted by EasyMike on Wednesday, August 29, 2012 6:58 AM

Judges are members of the "In" Crowd.

Smile

 

  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Los Angeles, CA
Posted by corvettemike on Wednesday, August 29, 2012 3:19 AM

Makes sense to me.Mostly at the IPMS is where I've seen these really critical types that seem to be under the impression if it's not weathered it's 'unrealistic". However I was reading FSM earlier and came across the work of Talal Chouman which is kind of what I want out of my armor builds, detailed but not dirty on a simple base and he's won best of shows.

Rise my brothers we are blessed by steel in my sword I trust...

Arm yourselves the truth shall be revealed In my sword I trust...

Havoc Models

  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Sydney, Australia
Posted by Phil_H on Tuesday, August 28, 2012 11:55 PM

I'm not a competition builder, but from what I understand, it's more about execution (ie. no brush marks, tide marks etc) and consistency in weathering (ie. not having mud/grime on top and clean lower hull/running gear) rather than "heavy" vs "light" weathering.

  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Los Angeles, CA
Think I'm finally finding my way
Posted by corvettemike on Tuesday, August 28, 2012 9:27 PM

After a couple of armor builds (I'm a car modeler) and trying the whole weathering thing, I find I'm much more content with a fairly factory pristine vehicle with a light wash and drybrush on a museum type base. The question is since I like competition how does this type of display usually fair? The reason I ask is the few armor shows I've been to there seem to be just your regular guys/girls then a crowd that criticizes everything. "Weathered too much, weathered too little, what do you mean factory fresh! that bolt is 1 scale mm off where it should be". What crowd do the judges fall in?

Rise my brothers we are blessed by steel in my sword I trust...

Arm yourselves the truth shall be revealed In my sword I trust...

Havoc Models

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