thanks 68GT. It's a cute little kit.
I had some people (RealRedBaron included) ask how I did my brush painting and get a varied finish instead of just one plain color. I must add that I am still learning, but pleased with my technique so far. (maximize the pictures to get the best detail!!) I decided to show a step-by-step on how I go from this:
to THIS:
First, paint the area one solid color, with thin paint and no brush strokes. Thinning the paint by dipping the tip of your brush in thinner works for me, but experiment for yourself to find the best way for you. Its OK if this first coat is a bit translucent in some areas, we will cover this up in the next step. What you dont want it blobby brush strikes and thick paint that fills in/obscures panel lines.
next you add a bit of white to the base color you used and (dont use a fancy brush for this) scrub/dry-brush the center of the panels. Dont put too much paint on the brush for this step, you are not covering up the base coat, just clouding the centers of the panels. Also dont get this paint too thin or you will take off the base coat and have bare plastic! With the same technique, add a bit more white to the mix for fabric covered surfaces. The paint will be rough at this stage, that is OK. That is fixed after all the paint has been applied.
the next step is the newest one I added, and am still experimenting with. I take a darker shade of the base coat and lightly dry-brush along panel lines. As soon as you see a change of color along the line, that is enough. The paint drys a darker color than it looks when wet. This will give you a stark outline of all the panels. This is OK, because we will get rid of this in the next step.
then mix a medium shade of you color (does not have to match any of the other coats, paint never faded evenly) and blend the lines in. You do not have to stay within panels, but just kinda give the whole area a good scrub. Do not be too heavy handed or you will cover up the shading and the lightened colors. If you do it right, you should get an appearance of a pre-shaded paint job with a post shading of the panels.
The paint job has nice color now, but is rough, right? This is easily fixed with a quick and careful scrubbing with 0000 steel wool. This levels out the paint but might take some paint off of higher areas if you are not careful. If so, just dab the appropriate color over the bare spot. The color does not have to match! The surface should now have a semi-gloss type sheen. You can apply a clear coat for decals if you wish, but I found I was able to add decals right over the smoothed paint and they snuggled down with no silvering.
I hope those directions were clear, if not tell me and I will try to clarify for you.
OWL