I understand, I went throught that too when I re-entered scale plastic models. It can seem intimidating, but honestly, since getting "up there" myself, I find the 1/72 stuff much more tedeous then the 1/48th and larger.
You see, when we were younger, along with our bodies, which included sharper eyesight, our hands and fingers were smaller and so the 1/72 things didn't seem so bad.
I do think if you have a favorite subject, it is good to do a 1/72 kit first, just to get the feel, but you will find on the 1/48th and larger, it is easier to do fine details and fixes without messing them up, since everything is bigger, hence not so critically tiny.
On the other hand, I would start by taping the decals to a south-facing window pane to bleach them if you want (I never do, since the worst I have seen is white going to a slightly dirty off-white, which is more like field conditions anyway). I just soak them longer (basically till they start to float off the paper by themselves), and am more careful not to pull or crack them if they are somewhat brittle (which decal softener helps). Or you can get somebody's 1/72 Zero kit (like Hasegawa's) and use any spare decals you might find in it.
The irony is that a good Hasegawa Zero kit in that scale is only about $5.00 cheaper then the 1/48th Revell kit, which of course has much better detail then the old Airfix.
Hope that helps.
Tom
Tom T
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