I spend lots of time looking at build videos in the hope of picking up tips to help with my modelling and find information about how well a kit builds. Is it just me, or is anyone else fed up of looking at videos where only 20% of the time is spent on the kit build and all the rest is devoted to fitting A/M parts and painting and weathering?
Even some sites that give lots of info about the kit seem to spend huge amounts of time counting rivets and checking for panel lines. I know this stuff is meat and drink to the serious modeller, but I'm in this for fun - not nightmares over whether I've got the exact shade of colour or whether I shouldn't have filled that seam but left a panel line! With the quality of kits, aftermarket parts and painting techniques available today, skilled modellers can produce truly outstanding results, but don't you think that maybe some of the fun has gone out of the hobby?
I did see a great build recently of the Tamiya Hiyakushiki Shitei III. I think the guy uses electrical cutters and paint brushes (he brush paints the whole kit) that most people would throw away. His weathering technique seems to consist of a single wash with some chipping done with a metal tool of some sort. But I get the impression he had lots of fun building the kit and I'd be well pleased to have something that good on my display shelf.
Even some sites that give lots of info about the kit seem to spend huge amounts of time counting rivets and checking for panel lines. I know this stuff is meat and drink to the serious modeller, but I'm in this for fun - not nightmares over whether I've got the exact shade of colour or whether I shouldn't have filled that seam but left a panel line! With the quality of kits, aftermarket parts and painting techniques available today, skilled modellers can produce truly outstanding results, but don't you think that maybe some of the fun has gone out of the hobby?
I did see a great build recently of the Tamiya Hiyakushiki Shitei III. I think the guy uses electrical cutters and paint brushes (he brush paints the whole kit) that most people would throw away. His weathering technique seems to consist of a single wash with some chipping done with a metal tool of some sort. But I get the impression he had lots of fun building the kit and I'd be well pleased to have something that good on my display shelf.
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