The lucky candidate is an AFV Club M548A1 Tracked Cargo Carrier.
Could anybody supply some painting/finishing tips on how to make the canvas
cover over the back of the unit look like it is fabric and not plastic?
TIA!
=Alan R.
best of Luck
Barney
"Alan Reinhart" <av...@home.com> wrote in message
news:B84CB6F6.950F%av...@home.com...
Alan, I use liquid cement to glue cheap one-ply toilet paper to the plastic
part. I use the part to make a pattern for the toilet paper. Sometimes I use
the paper by itself, in lieu of the plastic part, based on the part's thickness
and the complexity of the canvas cover.
HTH
Rob Gronovius
Major
US Army
MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY HOLIDAYS
end of post
Bill Neill
Alan Reinhart <av...@home.com> wrote in message news:<B84CB6F6.950F%av...@home.com>...
Rob Gronovius wrote: cheap one-ply toilet paper
Yes, the stuff akin to 400 grit sandpaper, not water soluable, found next to
the comode in most institutional restrooms.
I use ZigZag rolling papers soaked in thinned white glue. The paper has
very fine texture and looks in scale after painting and dry brushing.
--
Regards,
Gary Zuercher
ga...@chromaconcepts.com
www.chromaconcepts.com
I also drapped the nose turret of the Monogram B24J, as well as having
some pieces spread over part of the engine and wings where I had men
working on it. I also had a very nice tent setup using the same
methods.
Check six.
When people see my 1/96 USS Constitution, they comment on how I got
the sails to look so realistic. I used the kit sails, which are
vacuformed plastic. All I did was apply brown watercolor or diluted
tempera paint to the bare white plastic, wipe most of it away while
still damp, and "buff" the rest to bring out the lighter color
underneath while still leaving them a yellowish tint from the original
paint. It's also a good way to show streaks or rain marks.
M. J. Rudy
mjr...@localnet.com OR mjr...@hotmail.com
http://mjrudy.tripod.com/home.html