That is a cracking build Jakko, plenty of little details on it.
Unconverting a Sherman V from the Rye Field Models Sherman VC
Collapse
X
-
Guest
ThanksI always find it fun to make a vehicle from a photo, exactly because you can add all those kinds of small details that you likely wouldn’t on a more generic model.
Comment
-
Guest
Thanks for the explanation about the tarps. Quite a complex part when you think about it , but certainly looks right .Poles or not :smiling3:Comment
-
Guest
I’m now thinking I should maybe not have made the central bit as a separate, wider part but have it as the middle of the tarp not rolled up too neatly. But it is what it is now: a separate rolled-up sheet within the larger tarpComment
-
Guest
ThanksAs I was happy with the tarp, I sprayed the whole model with Vallejo grey primer (from a rattle can), and followed it up with an airbrushed coat of SCC 15 from MRP:
[ATTACH]431778[/ATTACH]
The suspension and lower hull sides will get covered in sand/clay colour instead, so I didn’t bother spraying those yet.Comment
-
Guest
With sand colour all over the suspension and lower hull sides:
[ATTACH]431926[/ATTACH]
That is too much, though, because sand doesn’t stick that well to vertical surfaces, even when it’s wet, and this tank would not have been driving through that all day at the point where it still had the wading ducts on. So, I added more SCC 15 to the vertical bits but left the sand on the horizontal ones:
[ATTACH]431927[/ATTACH]
This I achieved mostly by spraying from below, as that leaves the sand colour on horizontal surfaces visible from above, where real sand would accumulate:
[ATTACH]431928[/ATTACH]
That done, I put a lighter shade of OD (IDF Green by Mig) into my airbrush and highlighted the various panels to break the monotony, more on top than on the sides:
[ATTACH]431929[/ATTACH]Comment
-
-
Guest
Made a start at painting details:
[ATTACH]432065[/ATTACH]
The various canvas bits got base coats of OD, khaki and brown, followed by a glaze (transparent furniture paint) to bring out the shadows. The rubber spare track blocks have been painted dark grey, as have the running surfaces of the roadwheels and parts of the track where sand wouldn’t build up all that much, but these all need more work. I also put even darker grey in the areas where I think Bostik waterproofing compound would have been applied,
Comment
-
Guest
-
Guest
Thanks, and here’s the next installment
I applied Vallejo weathering effects light mud to the track and wheels:
[ATTACH]432320[/ATTACH]
This probably needs some more added to better represent the sand the tank was supposedly driving through, and more painting to bring out the detail. Also, the other side is completely untouched by this as yet.
After that, I added the markings:
[ATTACH]432321[/ATTACH][ATTACH]432322[/ATTACH][ATTACH]432323[/ATTACH][ATTACH]432324[/ATTACH]
Most are from the Black Lion Decals set, but the division and arm of service markings come from a Star Decals set and the bridge classification disc is from an Asuka Sherman V. Black Lion also supplies all of these, but they’re too big (probably because the man behind the company draws them at 1:72 scale and then resizes for 1:35, or so he told me) and the yellow has a darker dot overprint that looks poor.
I also painted the details some more:
[ATTACH]432325[/ATTACH]
The rubber track blocks got a wash of thinned (about 1:1) Indian ink and then a drybrush of dark grey, while the steel blocks were painted gun metal, given a layer of Games Workshop brown ink (long out of production) and then a drybrush with Revell rust colour. They still need some matt varnish to dull them a bit more. I also applied that over all the canvas bits I painted earlier.Comment
Comment