Well things were going well.....until this afternoon.
I got the underside painted white yesterday, and left it to dry over night.
In the booth last night.
Was pleased with the job I did of molting the color a little bit, so it wasn't ultra bright white.
Went on to paint the upper half this afternoon, and ran into some trouble. I questioned whether or not I should thin the paint a little more since it seemed a little on the thicker side. Tested what I had mixed, and it seemed fine. So away I go painting. Don't realize until after I'm done some of the paint dried before it hit the model, and gave it that gritty, dusty appearance. Grrr. Ok, I've dealt with this before. I rub it down with tack cloth to remove the grit. Thinned the paint some more, since I'm assuming that was the cause, and tried again. It did it again. What the heck?! I took a break at this point and left it sit for a while. When I came back to it there were some areas of the paint that had that cracked look to them. So I had the bright idea to just strip the paint with enamel thinner. Which worked, but it took me over an hour, and made a huge mess of things. To top it off it seems with all the rubbing and cleaning I was doing it rubbed off a lot of the raised panel lines.
So here is my mess.
I've opted to go a head and rescribe the lost detail to the best of my ability. This may take me a few days, but I know I can fix this mess of a Phantom.
One wing rescribed.
Compared to the other wing that I haven't done yet.
A bit of a set back, but these things happen.