I am in the process of painting an Italeri Bergepanther (ARMOR) and there are
several sections of wood on the vehicle.
Can anyone share any techniques for painting / creating a realistic looking
"wood" finish?
Tanks Alot in advance.
Tony Matteliano (to...@buffnet.net)
Tony
Tim Powers did an excellent article in the October 1996 issue of Scale Auto
Enthusiast for a "woody" wagon. There should be some information applicable to
your project there.
Hope this helps.
Two or three issues ago, Scale Auto Enthuiast magazine had an article on
how to paint wood finishes. It was aimed specifically at the wood trim
on old cars, but the article was excellent and the results were some of
the best I have seen in photos. Haven't tried it yet, myself, but I am
nearing the point on one of my projects where I am going to give it a
try. The techniques in the article could be used on something other than
car models. Not near my magazines now, but if you need to know the
specific issue, e-mail me back and I will find it.
Mike Settle
--
(Our problems are mostly behind us. What we have to do now is fight the
solutions. --Anon. )
Don
Paint the base color(s). In my case it was a laminated prop, so I masked
and sprayed several colors to represent the separate sections of wood.
I then used a very fine-toothed razor saw to lightly score the surface of
the paint along the grain lines. This could also be done with a wire
brush, just try to create the effect of a bunch of parallel striations.
I then washed the surface in diluted India ink to highlight the "grain",
allowed it to dry, wiped it off, and dipped the props in Future to
represent the varnish coat.
Looks pretty good!
John Noack
IPMS 23017
All the methods for painting plastic to look like wood grain so far have
been for 1/35 scale. How does one do the wood decks of a 1/350 scale
ship?? I have the Tamiya "Bismark". Would the decks have been left a
natural wood or were they painted? If they were bare wood, how would you
do the deck to look more like wood? I doubt any wood graining would be
visible in that scale? Right? Thanks for any thoughts on this,
especially from you ship guys, in advance.
Ray
The best way is to paint a base color, then mask off 'planks' with
strips of tape and paint in a shaded or tinted version of the base
color. Keep doing this, and when the mask is removed, there will be a
contrasting effect looking like plank-to-plank variation.
The real trick is to be SUBTLE. Drastic changes of the base color will
make the deck look like an old, unpainted barn side (the voice of
experience). We're talking one part white in ten to twenty parts base,
and adding grey, green or yellow instead of lots of white, black, or
such.
A final dry-brushing with the base and the ship-side color will help
blend in the effects.
--
This has been Mark and/or Mary Shannon
at Shin...@ix.netcom.com
Remember that every cliche started out as a stroke of genius.
In Article<32EA1A...@mcleod.net>, <rese...@mcleod.net> writes:
> Path:
> Date: Sat, 25 Jan 1997 08:37:01
>
> > CS wrote:
> > Date: Sun, 26 Jan 1997 04:04:44
>
> > Tony, Matteliano wrote:
> > >
> > > Hello Everyone:
<snip all the important stuff>
>
> Ray
Hey, which one of you guys has your clock set wrong? Ray may be
*good* but can he really answer a question before it is written?
00
/
<>
John
Kinda depends on their respective relationships to the International
Date Line, doesn't it?
--
_____________________________________________________________________
Mike Schatz - Boise, ID -- Msc...@aol.com or msc...@boi.hp.com
HP ONLY: http://w3copern/mschatz.html
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Disclaimer: All opinions expressed are mine, AND YOU CAN'T HAVE 'EM!