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C-47 Skytrain/Dakota/DC-3 GB

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  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Berkeley CA/St. Paul MN
Posted by EBergerud on Friday, January 4, 2019 5:02 PM

 

I've started the black basing. (For those unfamiliar with the technique there's a really good 8 minute video on YouTube by the fine modeler Matt McDougal whose callsign is Doog. Search "Black Basing" and it's there.) The idea is to avoid pre and post shading altogether and create a random tonal variation. Natural light will cause tonal variation on even a new item - any military artifact in service will show wear very quickly and that amplifies tonal variation. Instead of priming in gray and using black paint to preshade - which provides a "shadow" along the panel lines (a tonal variation - but one that is very symmetrical - very different from the random variation my eyes see) you prime in black and cover the model with very thin squiggles and lines. That's called the mottling phase. Mottling requires "painting small" - you get in very close (less than an inch) and spray thinned paint at very low psi. The color chosen will depend upon the base coat color - a simple mottle would be a lightened version of the base color. More colors cause different tonal variations. Doog does one thing differently than I do. He uses the "acrylic lacquer" paints like Gunze or MRP. There's no question that for this task they're better. However, I use only water based products whenever possible so I don't.

 

 Primed by Eric Bergerud, on Flickr

 

For the first time I tried Mission Model paints a new US made water based acrylic. (Armor super star & graphic artist Mike Rinaldi helped in development and designed the bottles. The bottles, btw, are very good: dropper and ball bearing inside: just like High Flow.) I've used Golden High Flow for a couple of years and think they're splendid. I did want to try Mission Model paints because they had very good renditions of olive drab (including ANA 41 - the very dark OD used on almost all US AC in WWII). A good olive drab is a very hard color to mix on your own. MM paints come with proprietary thinner and a polyurethene conditioner: that may sound like Greek to many, but it's similar to the polymer thinning mediums used for High Flow. Mission doesn't want you to thin their paints as much as many do - I'd thin High Flow at least 50:50 for mottling. With MM I settled for a ration of ten parts paint; three parts thinner and three parts conditioner. I also added a couple of parts of Windsor Newton fluid retarder. WN is very good stuff - just don't use too much or the paint won't dry. The Mission Model conditioner is also a retarder, but I reinforced it because "painting small" will cause tip clog, and you don't want tip dry too. (When mottling you'll want to wipe the tip clean with a paintbrush every few minutes - no problem.) High Flow has ample retarder built in. (I should note that I've been using a Japanese made Creos Platinum airbrush - made in the Iwata factory for Gunze. It is terrific for detail work and has made my Harder Steenbeck obsolete. Unfortunately the nozzle used a very small and requires a special wrench to remove. But it is precise. When you remove the needle, there's almost zero paint on it above the tip - the sign of a well made brush. The basic Creos is $85 and well worth it in my view. I use a .2mm needle.) I did have a little trouble with splatter at first (not hard to do at 1 inch), but when I dropped to the psi down to about 10, things began to work very well. I used two shades lightened OD (cut with yellow - not white - as recommended by US armor guru Steve Zalogda), and lesser mottling with a medium green and white. Here's the result:

 

 Mottle by Eric Bergerud, on Flickr

 

 MottDet by Eric Bergerud, on Flickr

 

After mottling, you apply a highly thinned base coat. (Doog calls this stage "blending.") With High Flow I would have used 60% thinning medium. (Doog recommends 70% thinner with Gunze or MRP). I watched Will Pattison on YT do a two hour review on Mission Model paints and he tried an abbreviated form of black basing. He also noted, correctly, that MM are best applied in thin layers, layers which are quite translucent at low psi. This is very important because if the base coat comes down too heavily, the mottling will be erased. If you've every sprayed preshaded lines out of visibility you know the problem. (Should note that because of the techniques used, black basing requires very little paint. That means fine detail remains very visible.) For this job I used my standard Iwata Eclipse and spray from a normal distance at about 15 psi. It took several coats to build up which is good. I stop applying base coat before it looks done because the acrylics will darken when they dry. You can always add more if needed. But the whole idea is have a lot of tonal variation. I am very happy with the Mission OD ANA 41. It's very dark, and that's accurate. (It's also very matte - that's one difference from the eggshell satin of High Flow.) I came upon an interesting factoid. When looking at C47 pics, it struck me that very often the fabric rear vertical tail appears a different color. According to USAAF color expert Dana Bell, most C47s had this piece constructed in several different factories so it was often done in a different shade of OD. To replicate this, I applied OD ANA 319 - the olive drab that the USAAF was going to use in early 1943 but rarely did because of the switch to natural metal finish a couple of months later. ANA 319 is interesting - as I understand Zalogda, who certainly knows olive drab, this shade is almost identical to that used on American armor and vehicles. It's distinctly lighter. Should note that I haven't done anything to avoid a slight yellow shift from the lighting here. I suppose I'll have to beg my wife to use her iPhone to photograph the finished build. Here what we've got now:

 

 Blend by Eric Bergerud, on Flickr

 

 BlendFus by Eric Bergerud, on Flickr

 

Haven't done the bottom yet, but that's faster. It doesn't look good now, but it's not supposed to. We're thinking a very hard working transport flying in New Guinea a place hard on man, beast and machines. There's a lot of weathering to come: salt fading, oils, panel lines, exhaust/fluids. I may put on a filter to lighten it even more.

 

Eric

 

 

A model boat is much cheaper than a real one and won't sink with you in it.

  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Berkeley CA/St. Paul MN
Posted by EBergerud on Friday, January 4, 2019 5:33 PM

If anyone is having Olive Drab worries, don't. According to Dana Bell the paint was supposed to have seven pigments. When war production started, producers dropped the pigment cadmium because it was used to process armor plate. It also stabilized the OD. In practice, the USAAF insisted on proper camo and proper OD. (ANA 41 is very dark.) But once in the field, the stuff faded with warp speed. It was also matte which helped it fade and also pick up dirt. We see color pics of restored planes in lovely gloss OD applied with modern paints - the one thing a WWII bird would not have looked like. So about anything would work.

Keydra: I did the 1/48 Revell JU-52 - a really good kit, although a late release for Revell. I'd think the old Monogram would be pretty good. Revelogram models were usually nicely shaped. If you look at a DC3, you'll note the zillion rivets - raised panel lines almost get that effect better than recessed, especially at 1/48. I don't have the space, but there's something neat about big models.

John - if you're out there - very nice kits. Did you like the AM B-25? I've got one in my stash but have heard that A) it's one of the greatest kits ever made and B) the kit is horrid and will drive you bats. Not sure if I want to take the plunge. But it is big.

Eric

 

A model boat is much cheaper than a real one and won't sink with you in it.

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Friday, January 4, 2019 8:43 PM

Looking good Eric!  You have certainly spent time doing research for your build!  Look forward to seeing more progress. 

I finally have enough for an update, lol.  After fighting with the flaps from start to finish, they are done.  I still have a lot of tidying up to do with them though.  They don't look the greatest, but you won't see much of it on display.

Started to add some of the exterior PE.

As she sits for the night. 

I still have a little bit of putty/sand work to do, but not much.  Honestly I think I'm getting to a point of being too picky, lol.  Once I start laying down paint, during drying sessions I think I'll follow lawdog's tutorial for radial engines, and start scratch building other things.  Hoping to start putting paint down this weekend!

GAF
  • Member since
    June 2012
  • From: Anniston, AL
Posted by GAF on Saturday, January 5, 2019 12:51 AM

Keyda> That coming along nicely!  Getting close to laying down some color.  The flaps look great!

Eric> I must admit that the subject I've chosen was stationed in India, so I'm paying close attention to what you're doing here.

I hope I can get started on my C-47 soon, but my current project is giving me fits!

Gary

 

  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Berkeley CA/St. Paul MN
Posted by EBergerud on Saturday, January 5, 2019 5:01 AM

Burma was very bad news for aircraft. No place on God's planet was worse than New Guinea day-in-and-out (except perhaps someplace beastly cold - heat can't kill you). But Burma did have the monsoon and mega mud. When things were really ugly, it grounded man and machine, but what's surprising is that both sides fought through even dreadful conditions. A C47 had very strong under carriage, and was perfect for the rough spots. Not sure what the Commando Air Force was really intended to do - the Wingate deep penetration campaigns were hard to call successful, although I guess Merrill did a little better. I titled my first chapter about the South Pacific "The War Against the Land" - that would do for Burma too. (Of course there were cities, roads, a civilian population and women - all things not there in New Guinea and nice when not fighting - but a major campaign in Burma would have been a blinking nightmare. Good generals though - Slim was very keen and Stillwell was a splendid operational leader - he should have been an Army Commander in the ETO instead of being wasted in China. Put Stillwell in Courtney Hodges' spot and the US might have cracked the Rhine in late 44. Maybe. Or not.

 

A model boat is much cheaper than a real one and won't sink with you in it.

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: 37deg 40.13' N 95deg 29.10'W
Posted by scottrc on Saturday, January 5, 2019 9:42 AM

I started my Gooney Bird project his morning.

Eric,

Your tutorial came at the best time.  My plane also is going to be a representative of the CBI. I may try this technique on this project.  I have been trying it on my last couple of 1/700 ship projects and the results have been quite impressive.  I never could get pre-shading down. 

Scott

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Saturday, January 5, 2019 1:19 PM

Thanks Gary!  I wish they looked a bit better, but it is what it is at this point, and I'm trying to the best of my ability.  Most of that portion won't be seen once the flaps are in place anyway. 

Eric, sounds like a place I wouldn't want to live.  It amazes me where some people to choose to live.  Some of the most unforgiving places.

Scott, YesI've wanted to give that painting method a shot myself, but I won't be trying it on Mini Whiskey.  Maybe on my next build which will be the P-40 for the Airfix GB.  Whiskey pretty much lacks noticable tonal differences.  I attempt to highlight things here and there, but I don't know.  I'm already putting my skills to the test with the paint job.

I've been keeping busy with the putty/sand/prime/repeat.  I still have some areas to work on.  I'm hoping I can at least get color on the bottom of the plane by the end of the day.  We'll see.  I'm trying to take care of all the little spots that still need sanding first.

 

 

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Saturday, January 5, 2019 8:43 PM

Finally got to spend the entire day at my bench, and I have something to show for my time, lol.

I had to scratch make these tubes on the bottom of the fuselage.  I almost missed them in my pictures.

Finally a coat of paint on the underside!

Added the chips on Whiskey's chin.

Painted the outside of the flaps.

Got the control surfaces painted.

Next up I think I'll finish off the bottom of the plane by painting the inner flap sections white.  I'm working in a specific order with the paint.  The upper part of the fuselage, and the wings are likely going to be painted with acrylic craft paint.  I've had a few succesful tests using it thinned with future and water.  I'm aware of the adhesion issues that might pop up with going this route, but it is going to give me a better chance of matching Whiskey's unique colors.  So I'm laying down all the regular model paint first.  I know I can mask over that without issue.  So fingers crossed I get this right.  I may even paint the invasion stripes and de-icing boots before painting the upper part of the wings and fuselage.  Just so I don't have to mask off the acrylic paint at all. 

 

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by keavdog on Saturday, January 5, 2019 9:09 PM

Comming along nicely.  Lots of progress - interested to see how your craft paint works out.

Thanks,

John

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Saturday, January 5, 2019 9:39 PM

keavdog

Comming along nicely.  Lots of progress - interested to see how your craft paint works out.

 

Thanks!  I am too, lol.  I did a test patch on a junk model and masked over it.  A few tiny spots of paint lifted, but that was it.  I'm just going to try and avoid masking over it if I can.  Fingers crossed it works out alright.

 

 

  • Member since
    May 2017
  • From: Denver, Colorado
Posted by MrStecks on Saturday, January 5, 2019 10:04 PM

EBergerud,
Nice work on the black-basing.  For me I really prefer it now to pre-shading.  Doog's videos are great.

Keyda,
Nice progress on W7.  I'm impressed with your PE flaps...  and also a little angry.
But that's just because I become angry whenever I see PE, at all.
It just triggers me. lol
(I've been battling with PE this evening on a Fw-190 kit.  Arghhh!)

Cheers,
Mark 


On the bench:  Revel 1/48 B-25J Mitchell

In the queue: Tamiya 1/48 F4U-1A Corsair

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Saturday, January 5, 2019 10:41 PM

MrStecks

Keyda,
Nice progress on W7.  I'm impressed with your PE flaps...  and also a little angry.
But that's just because I become angry whenever I see PE, at all.
It just triggers me. lol
(I've been battling with PE this evening on a Fw-190 kit.  Arghhh!)

Cheers,
Mark 

 

Thanks, lol.  I feel you pain!  I hate PE!  I have struggled my way through the flaps.  I'm fine with flat pieces that just need to be glued in place, but when it comes to bending, and constructing tiny parts that need to be glued together I suck, lol.  Everything wants to stick to the tweezers instead of where it's supposed to despite my careful application of glue.  So irritating!  I'm really surprised I didn't land up with the tweezers glued to my fingers, or my fingers glued together.

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Saturday, January 5, 2019 11:49 PM

Keyda81

Thanks, lol.  I feel you pain!  I hate PE!  

 

Well, that's silly.

Not to be a turkey, but it is a thing we can choose, right?

I do find aircraft PE more challenging than ship or armor PE. 

But, you need to learn the skills to deal with it.

There is so much first hand knowledge by folks available online in terms of techniques and tricks.

I think your flaps look ok, and I would say the only thing is to wash them in acid now to get rid of all of your fingerprints.

 

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Berkeley CA/St. Paul MN
Posted by EBergerud on Sunday, January 6, 2019 4:55 AM

If you don't think ship PE sets the standard for awful - you haven't seen a $200 "super upgrade" set from someone like Prontos or Flyhawk - of course some ship modelers think nothing of spending six months on one model - or a year.

Two gadgets are really useful. Small Shop sells a $10 gadget that's beastly simple but really helpful. It's a clear piece of plexiglass with a beveled side and a handle super-glued on. You can put the thing on top of the PE - see what your doing - keep it in place, and get it off with a blade. Their little bending tool is neat too. But the hold'em gadget is more helpful I'd say. The other gadget is a wax pencil. They're white and have a sticky filling. You put the thing on a PE part, even one very small, and it should stick - but not hard so it comes off easy when in position. This is a $2 item. (A thick toothpick with some beeswax does almost as well.) And of course the most important ingredient (beyond younger eyes) is Aleene's tacky glue - the stuff grabs PE like magic. Small PE parts often only need Aleene's, but a dab of stupid glue seals the job. Aleene's is available at any fabric store and most hardware stores. Aleene's dries clear.

Eric

 

A model boat is much cheaper than a real one and won't sink with you in it.

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by keavdog on Sunday, January 6, 2019 5:08 AM

EBergerud - really helpful comment.  We all strugle with PE.  Thanks for the info - looking into this vendor.  Cheers!

Thanks,

John

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Towson MD
Posted by gregbale on Sunday, January 6, 2019 7:00 AM

Lagging well behind everybody else, but I finally got my wee Roden 'beastie' on the production line. Fuselage together, canopy and wings on, clear parts masked for eventual painting.

Did a bit of 'pre-contouring' at the rear base of the canopy area where either the canopy is too narrow or the fuselage too wide...a little putty should blend everything nicely.

The kit provides both the short and long nacelle intakes...though, oddly, it doesn't actually mention the shorter ones, which I'll need for my RCAF bird. I'll also have to lop off the tail cone, which was mainly a feature of civil a/c and rarely found on military marks.

Really inspiring work on the builds, everyone! EBergerud, the mini-tutorial on black-basing was hugely instructive; I've been doing a variant of that for years without realizing it had a name!Big Smile And Keyda, I know it was a lot of work, but the flaps look great!

TTFN

Greg

George Lewis:

"Every time you correct me on my grammar I love you a little fewer."
 
  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Sunday, January 6, 2019 8:25 AM

GMorrison, I wasn't planning on doing any PE other than what came with the kit when I bought it which was the Eduard stuff.  When I opened the box I found a page that showed making it flaps down, and that gave me the idea.  This is pretty much my first venture with PE.  I did alright with the interior stuff, but the flaps just gave me a hard time.  More than likely from my inexpierence.  Live and learn.  They could be better, could be worse.

Eric, Some tools to deal with the PE, and the right glue probably would of helped a lot.  After this build I think I will try to avoid PE, lol.  Thanks for the tips!  If I venture forth into PE again I will certainly give different glue a try, and get some tools as well.

Greg, Looks like you'll be ready for paint soon!  I felt like I wasn't getting anywhere with my repeated putty/sand/prime sessions.  Don't worry you won't be lagging for long lol, I still have TONS to do.  You'll be flying by me soon, lol.  Thanks!  I've certainly learned something from this venture with PE.

 

  • Member since
    May 2017
  • From: Denver, Colorado
Posted by MrStecks on Sunday, January 6, 2019 10:17 AM

Greg, the Roden kit is looking good.  Best wishes with the landing gear, that was the worst part of that kit for me.  I had to cut off the locator pins at the top of the struts and sand them a bit to get the gear to hang vertically instead of canted off to the left or right.

Cheers,
Mark


On the bench:  Revel 1/48 B-25J Mitchell

In the queue: Tamiya 1/48 F4U-1A Corsair

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Towson MD
Posted by gregbale on Sunday, January 6, 2019 10:59 AM

MrStecks
I had to cut off the locator pins at the top of the struts and sand them a bit to get the gear to hang vertically instead of canted off to the left or right.

Mark, I appreciate the heads-up!

At that scale, it's spindly enough, without having to re-engineer it! Sad

Greg

George Lewis:

"Every time you correct me on my grammar I love you a little fewer."
 
  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: New Port Richey
Posted by deattilio on Sunday, January 6, 2019 4:10 PM

 

Some nice work and progress in the GB!  Feeling like I’m still tethered to the start line with my kit.
Didn’t get much time at the bench but, took care of some tedious details.  Plug wires were bit of a pain but were easier than those seatbelts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WIP:
Trying to get my hobby stuff sorted - just moved and still unpacking.

 

"Gator, Green Catskill....Charlie On Time"
 

 

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Sunday, January 6, 2019 4:24 PM

deattilio

 

Some nice work and progress in the GB!  Feeling like I’m still tethered to the start line with my kit.
Didn’t get much time at the bench but, took care of some tedious details.  Plug wires were bit of a pain but were easier than those seatbelts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Those engines look great!  I hope mine come out half as nice!  I haven't started on mine yet.  I'm going to work on those while I let the craft paint dry.  I left the engines and some scratch building to do so I had something to do while paint dries.  I have a hard time leaving things alone, lol.  I've got the white painted on for the invasion stipes.  Letting that dry before I mask it and do the black.  Then it's on to the craft paints.  Wish me luck!

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Sunday, January 6, 2019 8:10 PM

So after doing the shopping this morning I spent the rest of the day working on the invasion stripes.  That was a bit challenging, stressful, and tedious.  Also my first time painting them.  I know it seems kind of backwards to put the stripes on already, but I can mask them off and not worry about pulling the paint. 

Started off with masking off the white area and spraying that.

Then came the tedious part.  Masking off the areas that I wanted to stay white.  Lots of measuring, cutting tape down to size, and measuring again, lol.  That Tamiya tape for curves was a life saver when it came to the stripes on the fuselage.  I opted to paint the de-icing boots in the same shot.  All ready for the black.  I got nervous at this point, lol.

Hanging out in the paint booth after spraying the black. 

Lots of tape pulling, accompied with some stress, lol.  Drum roll please.............Big Smile

I'm thrilled with how they came out!  I was so expecting major bleeding of the black.  But my paitence paid off.  I made sure everything was burnished down with a toothpick.  I was really waiting for some kind of disaster, lol.  Going to let the paint dry for a few days before I mask it off to paint Whiskey's signature colors.  I'll work on the engines, and other stuff for now.

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Towson MD
Posted by gregbale on Sunday, January 6, 2019 8:18 PM

Keyda81
Lots of tape pulling, accompied with some stress, lol. Drum roll please.............Big Smile

Looking really good there, K! Your patience and hard work really paid off!Yes

Greg

George Lewis:

"Every time you correct me on my grammar I love you a little fewer."
 
  • Member since
    June 2017
Posted by UnwaryPaladin on Sunday, January 6, 2019 9:42 PM

Got a chance to work on Spooky after the holidays. Sometimes I create my own problems. Based on numerous dry fittings, the fuselage halves could have gown together with very little seam work. Somehow I wound up with a step in the seam that took some work to fix. 

 

The lower part of the center wing fit well, then the wing halves are attached.

Pretty big bird for 1/72!

The only parts of the wing assembly that will need work are the engine nacelles. They assemble with a verticle seam, I would think a radial seam matching the panel lines would be just as easy to cast. An exhaust pipe fits into the groove, I think I can blend the putty under it so the transition will be hidden. The other side of that nacelle fits fine, go figure.

After I finish cleaning up the nacelles and a few other small areas, she'll be ready for paint!

 

 

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Monday, January 7, 2019 8:45 AM

Nice!  I did the same thing with mine.  I test fitted stuff and it was great.  Somehow things got fudged up when I glued everything together.  Made some extra work for myself, lol.  Can't wait to see it all painted!  Are you doing the camo scheme? 

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: 37deg 40.13' N 95deg 29.10'W
Posted by scottrc on Monday, January 7, 2019 10:01 AM

Whew Keyda, I was nervous for you as well since I seem to have really bad luck with bleed, which is why I now always spray a clear coat along my mask.  Spectacular job on those invasion stripes.  Toast

  • Member since
    May 2017
  • From: Denver, Colorado
Posted by MrStecks on Monday, January 7, 2019 10:11 AM

deattilio
The engines look great.  Nice work on the wiring!

Keyda
Beautiful job on the stripes, they look great.  Really coming together nicely.

UnwaryPaladin
Looks like it's shaping up nicely.  It's frustrating to test fit something and not see any issues, only to have it go south when the glue gets applied.  Looks like you're handling it well. 

Cheers,
Mark


On the bench:  Revel 1/48 B-25J Mitchell

In the queue: Tamiya 1/48 F4U-1A Corsair

  • Member since
    June 2017
Posted by UnwaryPaladin on Monday, January 7, 2019 10:49 AM

Keyda81

Nice!  I did the same thing with mine.  I test fitted stuff and it was great.  Somehow things got fudged up when I glued everything together.  Made some extra work for myself, lol.  Can't wait to see it all painted!  Are you doing the camo scheme? 

 

Yes, going with the camo scheme. Keyda, the stripes really turned out nice! What kiind of paint do you use for your taxidermy work? I've found the Wildlife Colors brand works fairly well on plastic. Craft paints have been hit or miss for me. Haven't had much luck with the gloss craft paints yet.

  • Member since
    August 2016
Posted by Keyda81 on Monday, January 7, 2019 11:50 AM

scottrc

Whew Keyda, I was nervous for you as well since I seem to have really bad luck with bleed, which is why I now always spray a clear coat along my mask.  Spectacular job on those invasion stripes.  Toast

 

Lol, I was seriously waiting for a disaster while I was peeling off the tape.  I was shocked when there was no disaster!  Thank you!

Thanks Mark!

UnwaryPaladin, Thanks!  Haven't really done much taxidermy lately, but I was using craft paints, and oil paints.  Someone posted on one of the Facebook pages about using craft paints, and of course I had to inquire.  Only because I knew matching Whiskey's colors would be impossible, and I felt trying to mix model paints to come up with the right shade would be a lot more costly than trying it with craft paints.  I can also mix up a much bigger batch with the craft paints.  They told me they thin the paint with a 50/50 mix of water and Future.  So I'm going to give it a go, and hope it works out.  I'm going to try to avoid masking over the craft paint if I can.  I might have to do it in a few small areas.  But that's why I painted everything else first.  I'm not worried about masking over the model paint. 

 

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Monday, January 7, 2019 11:55 AM

The stripes came out well. You'll no doubt hear all about how the stripes were painted on by hand on 6/05/44, but your subject is the restored aircraft and judging from the photos, her stripes are nice and sharp.

I suggest you wait a solid week before putting any masking tape on them. No hurry, find something else to work on.

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

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