This kit's even older than I am. The Revell Northrop Snark missile was originally released in 1958; it was covered in rivets and had those helpful marking-guides moulded onto the wings and fuselage... So, I had to sand everything down, re-scribe and add a bit of extra detail. I didn't trust the Revell decals to fit so the white areas were masked and painted. It's 1/81 scale, apparently.
Getting Snarky.
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It was well worth the effort. That looks fantastic. I've never heard of a Snark missile but I certainly know what one looked like nowOriginally posted by \it was covered in rivets and had those helpful marking-guides moulded onto the wings and fuselage... So, I had to sand everything down, re-scribe and add a bit of extra detail.
I wonder what Lewis Carroll would have made of it? I presume that's where the name came from.
Cheers
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Negative implications aside, (its a missile built to kill), it looks great; realistic, nice work!Comment
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Cheers for the nice comments, guys.
Thanks Steve. I guess unless we're building cars or airliners, most of what we build is designed to kill, one way or anotherOriginally posted by \Negative implications aside, (its a missile built to kill), it looks great; realistic, nice work!
Thanks Gregg. I use one of those light-tents to diffuse the light from a couple of tungsten bulbs. I always manually set the camera's white balance and shoot RAW format, which enables me to tweak the shadows and levels to get a pure white background. I've written a short series for Scale Aviation Modeller International (SAMI) about photographing models, which has appeared in the last couple of issues. That goes into a bit more detail.How do you get such amazingly sharp/crisp photo's with a blank background as well?
Gregg
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