The first military vehicle model I built was as a kid of... maybe 10 or so. It was the Tamiya M3 Lee; my Dad gave it to me for Christmas and I soon acquired a set of Tamiya figures to go along with.
Eventually I put the tank and figures into a diorama on a base that was WAY too large and the whole affair was done rather poorly, if I remember rightly. Although, at the time, it was the neatest thing I had ever done!
Painted the base with different tempera colors; brown to represent dirt and some god-awful cyan-blue-green-teal or whatever color to represent the river that these adventurous souls of my creation were about to cross, throwing grenades and laying down covering fire as they went...
Anyhoo, that was the only armor piece I had built until about 6-8 years ago when I built this thing, my first 'serious' armor model:
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'Tis a Tamiya T-34/76 that was meant to be totally SOB, but I couldn't resist adding a few things here and there as well as thinning most of the edges down to something close to scale. Also added a few bullet and/or shrapnel holes in the thin-skinned areas.
Some additional things that I added, replaced or enhanced:
- Drilled out gun barrels (no-brainer)
- Thinned many, but probably not all, appropriate edges, including exhausts and fenders (no-brainer part 2)
- Scratchbuilt antenna mount; originally had an antenna made out of a cat whisker, but it's since disappeared. I figure that many Russkie tanks didn't have radios to begin with, so no-biggie...
- Added an electrical wire to the driving light
- Replaced all grab handles with something that looks way underscale, but I still like the way it looks...
- Replaced the various tie-down hooks with copper wire and flattened .010 solder wire
- Fuel tank straps made out of rolled and stripped foil from a wine bottle
There may be a few things which I've forgotten, but that's the gist of it...
The paint... green... enamel... Testors... maybe OLD Pactra...
I really dunno fersher what green I used, it's just a green that kinda looked like it belonged on a Soviet tank. Doesn't really matter anyway; once the weathering was done it didn't look like the same green...
The few markings were hand-painted. At first I was disappointed in the way the ID marking on the turret looked, but then I realized that the real deal probably wasn't all neat and perfect either...
The weathering was done with a combination of spraying gradually lightened tones of the base color, washes and pastels. I used alotta the RUSTALL black on this thing, as well as some black and dark brown enamel washes.
Doesn't really show too well in this shot, but many areas of bare metal were achieved using both the old Monogram-Humbrol 'Polished Steel' (buffable) and a pencil. The areas which do show clearly in this shot are simply spots where paint was scraped off to show the real metal (foil) underneath.
At some point I decided to put this thing on a base and experiment with muddy terrain and give the tank itself a mud treatment. The mud on the base is a mixture of celluclay and I dunno what else; I use alotta stuff I have lying around for this type of thing and almost never take notes. I also added some static grass and worked it up onto the model along with the rest of the groundwork...
The mud on the tank is real mud with varying applications of Future to simulate the transition between wet and dry. Also went back with pastels and one of my 'scrub' brushes to cover up and/or remove the tell-tale crystalline particles which are present in dirt of all sorts and which scream 'OUT-OF-SCALE!!!' whenever someone uses real mud on a model...
Uh... lessee... oh, yeah. Last, but certainly not least... the foliage came from a plant which was growing in one of the gardens in the yard.
So that's my first 'serious' armor model. The tail-end of the 222 which you see on the right belongs to the second 'serious' armor model I built...
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