Moses,
Well I have to say that I have never seen such a waste of time, materials and money. There are times that a model should just be set on fire and melted back to the earth from which it sprang. That's my opinion of my Japanese 97. Your Panzer on the other hand is absolutley beautiful. If you left it now as is, I would still be amazed and content for having seen it. I like that fresh, just been kissed factory look. But if you weather it and do the pastel work who am I to mess with perfection?
Love the track sag, the extra effort you put into it was well worth it. Just gives the whole thing a look of weight and mass. Says "I weigh alot and will crush puny Shermans"
I like the darker wash. In my opinion, to emphasise the lines and detail with a darker wash adds to the overall aesthetic. It accentuates the detail and visualy exaggerates it, giving it a crisper look. Something that I think is needed and helps with the overall presentation when working in scales like 1/32,1/35, or 1/72. Any drybrushing you add will tone down what the wash has picked up making for an easy balance that will even out in the end and still make a nice effect and a distinguished model.
The presentation base is nice too, makes it look like a cared for piece of art and completes it. In my own stuff I always put some sort of ground detail. I like doing it and it just sort of rounds the whole thing off. It doesn't necessarily have to be a diorama but just some dirt, pavement, road whatever to give it a little extra.
The wheels look very nice and after our MSN session I am going to make up a wheel mask like yours. That makes for some crisp lines.
The photography looks a little yellow. Could be my monitor but I don't think so since The forward detail is a different tone than the side and back shots. A little more light should fix that. Not much though just enough to brighten it a bit and not make it so warm. You have a nice illustration light though so everything stands out and nothing is washed out. (Don't use a camera mounted flash as it will create hot spots and wash away any detail in the photo). Grab some white poster board and use it to bounce some extra light onto the model from the sides and down low. This will fill in some of the dark areas under the sponsons and throw some illustrative illumination on the tracks and wheels.
All in all my opinions are just that, mine. Its sort of like trying to figure out how to make a better tree, why mess with perfection?
I look forward to seeing the finished project and only being further amazed.
Can you do something about that anaconda though....?
Mike
Mike
"Imagination is the dye that colors our lives"
Marcus Aurellius
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail...but, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "Damn...that was fun!"