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Il-2M3 Shturmovik (Tamiya, 1:72)

Looking great seb , nice work with the riveter . The quinta decals are excellent arent they , I used the same set when I did my il 2 m82 conversion last year . That kit did have rivets but in every other respect is stone age compared to the Tamiya one! Cheers tony
 
Wonderful Seb, putting your skills from 1/700 to 1/72 makes details stand out even more. The large wing of the Sturmovic is so similar to the Heinkel 111 and needs the rivet detail to add interest.

Cheers,
Richard
 
Thread owner
Looking great seb , nice work with the riveter . The quinta decals are excellent arent they , I used the same set when I did my il 2 m82 conversion last year . That kit did have rivets but in every other respect is stone age compared to the Tamiya one! Cheers tony
Yeah they are great, although I guess they come more to the front in some modern aircraft with multiple switches, knobs, MFDs and what not and less so with rather simplistic WW2 cockpits. I'll have to give them a try on something more modern one day. Which kit did you use as a base?

Wonderful Seb, putting your skills from 1/700 to 1/72 makes details stand out even more. The large wing of the Sturmovic is so similar to the Heinkel 111 and needs the rivet detail to add interest.

Cheers,
Richard
Well actually it is the other way around... I've been building 1:72 for my entire life and just recently (in the last few years) start to play a bit with ship models in 1:700. And yeah, the wings are rather huge and would be rather bland without riveting detail.
 
Thread owner
Slowly recovering from my health issues, so not much progress, but I guess I can call the bottom of the wings done.

il-2-6.jpg
 
Thread owner
And last but not least, the riveted front part of the fuselage. Rear part and tail were wooden so no riveting there.

il-2-7.jpg

il-2-8.jpg
 
Thread owner
Now that I am feeling a little better, I've made some major progress. Unfortunately the join between fuselage and wings wasn't the best so some surgery was required there. Machine gun barrels were replaced with insulin injection needles while the 23mm gun barrels and pitot tube were made of brass tubing from Albion Alloys. She's now ready for some paint under the coat of MrSurfacer 1500.

il-2-9-XL.jpg
 
Thread owner
Quite possibly my all time favourite WW2 plane, looking good so far.
Thank you Karl! It is an imposing bird for sure and was lucky enough to actually see it flying in 2019 at MAKS.
 
Thread owner
The bottom was painted with AMT-7 Light Blue (Mr.Paint) and shaded with lighter tones, making a combination of blackbasing and postshading so to speak.


il-2-10-XL.jpg
 
Very nice Seb :thumb2:

Just catching up with your build, I really like the cockpit and the underside paint looks spot on.

Geoff.
 
Thread owner
As I always paint from lightest to darkest colour, the AMT-1 Light Brown was the obvious choice. Again mottling over the black base with added different brown and light sandy tones to achieve the faded used paint effect.

il-2-11-XL.jpg
 
Cracking work Seb. Only just started using black-basing myself but love the effect it achieves.

Keep your great work.

Andrew
 
As I always paint from lightest to darkest colour
I find that statement slightly odd, given you started with a black base coat :) “Start with the lightest colour” is good advice over a light base (because then you probably won’t have issues with the paint not covering that underneath well enough), but when the model is black I kind of think doing it the other way would be better?
 
Thread owner
I find that statement slightly odd, given you started with a black base coat :smiling3: “Start with the lightest colour” is good advice over a light base (because then you probably won’t have issues with the paint not covering that underneath well enough), but when the model is black I kind of think doing it the other way would be better?
actually the reason for it is the light feathered overspray. doing it light to dark, you get much better looking feathered edge than the other way around.
 
actually the reason for it is the light feathered overspray. doing it light to dark, you get much better looking feathered edge than the other way around.
Yup...that works for me even for my illustration days...less dustier effect.

Cheers,
Richard
 
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