Time for another update.
Firstly I must say… all the builds are looking good.
Tony Lee and hellcat man, can’t wait to see that winter white wash splashed around.
The tracks go together the same as the Tamiya Famo, but due to their size, are a little harder to work with. I tried to make them as working, but this turned out to be an exercise in futility, I ended up with one set working, but the set I fixed to the vehicle, I made up as usual indy link tracks (make the run and fit to the vehicle before they set).
I laid the winter wash with gouache, the result turned out as I had envisaged (depicting the wash applied a long time ago, and most of it has been washed off).
I then gave it an (oil paint) all over filter wash with raw sienna, then burnt umber, and finally a mix of lamp black and paynes grey. (note the cable frame and the driver have just been popped into position for the photo, so they are not seated properly yet).
I placed the whole thing on the base (to see its overall effect), and have decided the figure at the back should not really be squatting down, (as he has no reason to be), so I have decided to use one of the extra figures that came with the kit.
The figures were (once assembled) primed with a coat of Tamiya flat flesh, the uniforms painted with Vallejo colour. Skin tones were done in oil paint (mix of burnt sienna, yellow ochre, and raw umber) and wiped with a Q-tip.
A wash of burnt sienna mixed with ultramarine blue was used on the uniforms (which gives a nice velvety black look), followed by drybrushing with titanium white (oil paint).
Currently I’ll finish the new figure, and make the snow prints to suit.(the base currently has a thin layer of dry-wall filler, reduced and dappled on with a sponge), then I can put down the layer of soft flake snow, and make the Kettenkrad actually look like it is embedded in the snow bank.
I’m still tossing up on whether to use any other ground effects (grasses, signage, telegraph pole, fence, etc.), or just leave the whole thing covered in snow.
Brett