Now that you mention it I should have run a mini streak of molding paste along the front - the basic fit is quite sound. Attention to detail is not my great strength. Live and learn.
The camera work was a little erratic. I think if you look at all the photos you'll see several where the shine is not evident. Might add that the model had a gloss coating in some of the build photos that I apply before filters (flat for washes and back to satin at the end.) Former German armor top gun Tony Greenland pushed strongly for a satin hull above the fenders and dead flat underneath. I think what he wanted to emphasize was the flat, grainy pigments below. The very last thing I do on a model tank is to spray the whole thing with pigments mixed in ISP - perhaps this one could have used another coating of the brew. Too much and you can dull down the tank completely. I don't know about others but I find a certain tension between attempts at extreme realism clash with making a model that will show the detail and paint job - and even the weathering. I'd guess that if you would examined WWII vehicles at the front you would have found covered with dings, mg/mortar damage, broken fenders and above all a bucket of mud, dirt and grime. I think you could argue that fidelity to the real world might make for less interesting models. (I just read von Luck's memoirs and he said that when crewing an AFV the dust was so ever-present it was like chewing chalk: and that's just the stuff in the air.) Arguably if a genuine vehicle looked they way I think they would have, many weathering techniques like modulation and even wear/chipping might not be necessary because the vehicle would have had a cake of dirt, dust and or mud rendering detail, especially at 1/35 scale almost invisible. Mig Jimenez once wrote that it's impossible to make a small plastic object really reproduce a large metal one - and he was talking about his own work. I think he's right, although the best modellers out there can come pretty close, but I'll never be in that league.
I don't do figures. I consider them almost a separate genre of modelling. If I was even going to think of it, I'd put hours into practice first. Maybe I have bad eyes but I think unless figures are done by someone who really knows his stuff, they detract - sometimes badly - from the kit. And if you put a group of figures in, they will draw the eye away from the kit itself for better or worse. I'd like to think of ways to suggest their presence. (They certainly would have present if trying to spring an ambush or hold a position. JPs were never supposed to travel alone.) In this humble piece I would have liked to stick in a MG42 somewhere - but I didn't have one.
Thanks much for the comments. Always a help.
Eric