M1 155mm Howitzer
A nice simple kit to ease myself back into it after a long break.
This one's going to be 50% filler by the time it's finished!
Steady progress. Fill, sand, repeat.
Slowly coming together now.
Primed and mostly base coated.
Shading done.
Chipping & filtering done.
Just a little tidying up to do, then the matt coat.
Note the different colour of the centre of the wheel hub. The bulk of the kit was done with AK Real colours rattle can. The hub was done with AK Real colours bottle. They are decidely different colours!
Note the new storage boxes in the background. Much neater than what I was doing before! My employer has decided to follow ISO27001, so I can no longer log on to my works PC from my personal PC when working from home. I now have a works laptop, but have had to set up a new workstation to accomodate it. All told, it's cost me over half a grand!
Not bad for a 50 year old kit.
Basic assembly of the figures done.
The howitzer is finished.
I need to redo the dials on the radio as the gloss varnish ruined the markings on the dials. The figures are primed, but I'll have to wait for the paint before continuing.
I've made some progress on painting the figures, my first attempt at doing so in any level of detail. So far, so good, so what? I can see some of the joints needed cleaning up better than I have done, but they're very hard to get at. Looks like Vin Diesel's family reunion.
Now that the uniform paint set has arrived, I can make a bit more progress with the figures.
More progress on the figures
Must be doing something right. The camera is recognizing faces.
Anyone else out there used to watch The Clone Wars?
Must remember to do eyebrows at some later point.
Lots of products and guidance is available for painting flesh tones out there. Unless you're this guy. Gap in the market, perhaps?
And another few stages closer...
Nearly ready for a clear coat.
In this kit you get the howitzer, the radio and the crew, including one round of ammo. One. What's needed is a pile of ammo and a stack of discarded casings. There don't appear to be any third party option either.
That radio is HUGE!
Shading and dry brushing done.
Next step, picking out any remaining details.
Here's a taste of the finished look on a ReDog UK base.
Note the very obvious bubbles in the wall. The whole base is the same.
The figures have been matt coated.
I's call them somewhere between "better than I expected" and "not as good as I'd hoped".
The base has a LOT of bubbles to be filled as well as some huge gaps. I'll try giving it a good coat of Mr Surfacer.
First dose of colour for the base. In the course of picking colours, I had to throw out three lots of paint that had dried out. Some still had the seals on them.
Picking out individual stones in different colours. More of this to do with other shades.
Two more colours added. A wash later on will blend them together.
More colours added to the stones and a quick test to see how it looks with the howitzer in place.
I added a soil coloured wash to the soil areas. This is an Italian farm, so we're talking light, well drained soil, typical for vinyards.
Somehow, I managed to get all the figures to balance on their feet on an uneven base in less than 5 minutes. I'm sure I'll never manage that feat ever again!
This is just a bit of an experiment in diorama composition. I'm liking it so far as nothing sticks out over the edge of the base.
A soil effects wash helps blend the multiple colours of the stonework together.
The base has been given a dry brush with light dust colour and the whole has had a matt coat. Now I have a bag of rocks & dirt to apply and a bag of tufts of grass.
Another composition test before deciding where the rocks & grass need to go.
The rocks & gravel are in place and I'm amazed what a difference they make.
It's finally finished!
Коментарі
28 11 December 2023, 19:23
Treehugger
Kit moulding can suck for a lot of kits, and I am guessing that you have kit parts with excess plastic here and there.
I can recommend the Tamiya file set, for smooth cut. Their flat file is super useful and makes short work of those kit parts that has to be flattened to get a good fit.
One has to make sure for some parts, to not file off too much plastic, or there might be another type of fitting issues, but usually not a problem in my experience, just on a rare occasion.
For a lot of kit parts in general, I like using a flat metal file to sand the surface flat, and then go over with a 2500 sanding stick, even though the surface is probably smooth already. Larger kit parts seems to be notoriously non-flat, and it gets worse once you use a file at first, then you (I have to) have to complete the flattening, else there will be noticeable sink marks.
Kit moulding can suck for a lot of kits, and I am guessing that you have kit parts with excess plastic here and there.
I can recommend the Tamiya file set, for smooth cut. Their flat file is super useful and makes short work of those kit parts that has to be flattened to get a good fit.
One has to make sure for some parts, to not file off too much plastic, or there might be another type of fitting issues, but usually not a problem in my experience, just on a rare occasion.
For a lot of kit parts in general, I like using a flat metal file to sand the surface flat, and then go over with a 2500 sanding stick, even though the surface is probably smooth already. Larger kit parts seems to be notoriously non-flat, and it gets worse once you use a file at first, then you (I have to) have to complete the flattening, else there will be noticeable sink marks.
14 December 2023, 03:51
Marc Le Bayon
lot of work for a very old kit I've seen when I was a kid under Max/Pearless Label.
Good luck...
I think roadwheels exist in resin cast, and barrel in metal.
lot of work for a very old kit I've seen when I was a kid under Max/Pearless Label.
Good luck...
I think roadwheels exist in resin cast, and barrel in metal.
14 December 2023, 10:26
John Hughes
Thanks, all. The biggest issues were sink marks & ejector pin marks (sometimes in daft places), but I suppose you have to expect that on such an old kit. The figures are by Masterbox. I've just put some Mr Surfacer on the joins to dry overnight. With luck, I'll be able prime them tomorrow and get to painting after that, if I've got the right paints.
Thanks, all. The biggest issues were sink marks & ejector pin marks (sometimes in daft places), but I suppose you have to expect that on such an old kit. The figures are by Masterbox. I've just put some Mr Surfacer on the joins to dry overnight. With luck, I'll be able prime them tomorrow and get to painting after that, if I've got the right paints.
26 December 2023, 20:44
John Hughes
Thanks, Jennifer. I'm taking it slow as it's the first time I've tried doing a proper job on 1/35 figures.
Thanks, Jennifer. I'm taking it slow as it's the first time I've tried doing a proper job on 1/35 figures.
3 February, 16:05
John Hughes
The radio fits across the gun trails when it's being towed and the spades at the end hang in the side brackets.
The radio fits across the gun trails when it's being towed and the spades at the end hang in the side brackets.
4 February, 13:19
gorby
The figures look great. The skin colour of the black gunner looks very believable.
The figures look great. The skin colour of the black gunner looks very believable.
14 February, 17:35