What a beautiful piece of work that you have done, it’s a shame that most of the amazing work you have done is not on display. One of my favorite British aircraft, cheers, mate.
Thank you once again for detailing another extraordinary build that becomes a masterpiece and lists the additional items necessary to turn into a museum quality model
I've just discovered your content today - where've you been hiding from my RUclips 'suggestions' feed all this time?! Absolutely breath-taking work that you put into everything you do, but especially here with the 'Wooden Wonder'. I cried a little bit, both in envy and at the sheer beauty of it. I can't wait to see your finished Chinook Mk1 either. Superlative skill from a true artisan.
Sorry, mistake - this is an airplane model from 305 Polish Bomber Squadron (305 Dywizjon Bombowy „Ziemi Wielkopolskiej i Lidzkiej im. Marszałka Józefa Piłsudskiego").
Greg I do wish you would do longer videos then again I have to stop work every time ! I keep saying it inspiration in whatever scale you build , oh and the figures are smashing too !! Regards Gav.
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know of a trick to log back into an Instagram account? I was stupid lost my password. I would love any help you can give me
@Andrew Alvaro I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im in the hacking process now. Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
You can, have faith we all start from a position of no experience take your time watch and learn from others and you will develop your own skills and style.
Magnificent! I'm building the 1/32 P-51D right now. I've used many Eagle-Cals products in the past and have the ones for Major George Preddy, Big Beautiful Doll and Old Crow. I will be building the Mosquito if I can find one. Really a beautiful job on this.
It's one of the best kits I have ever built, just fell together. And at some point, I must tackle the Tamiya 1/32 Birdcage Corsair. One I need to cross off my list 👍
@@GregsModels That one and both the MK IX and MK X Spitfire I will probably do a few more of the P-51's also. I loved the finger wag you did about the things getting smaller with age comment I almost fell off my chair.
Tamiya kits are well engineered and always thinking about the build process from a modeller's point of view. Just wish they'd produce other subjects rather than the mainstream aircraft. But I suppose they have to make products that appeal to everyone.
I loved this build, so inspirational, thanks a lot for sharing it. Your skill at painting and weathering is stunning .. would love to see a video of you explaining some of your painting techniques, when to use pastels, or water based paint, tips for weathering ... I must say that your painting of the engines and cockpit looks superb, will strive to learn how to do it on my models. Glad to be subscribed to your channel and greetings from Chile 😇
David R Lentz, Columbus, Ohio, USA (Saturday, 19 October, 2024) I look forward to Tamiya issuing a 1:32nd-scale kit of de Havilland’s DH-98 Mosquito RAF Mk.IV bomber variant. Alternately, several of this kit you built n your RUclips video (had I the means), at least two, which I would convert (with the aid of a high-quality multimedia conversion/detail set) to a Mosquito Mk.IV light bomber, and at least one to a Mk.II PR photo-reconnaissance aircraft version. Also, several other Tamiya kits in this scale: the 1) early Chance Vought F4U Corsair USN/USMC/FAA Fighter series; 2) North American Aviation P-51 Mustang USAAF/RAF air superiority fighter series; 3) Supermarine Spitfire RAF Mk.V Fighter of several marks (Ia, Ib, Vc, VIII, IXc). Also Airfix’s 1:24th-scale kit. And the assortment of aftermarket items parallelling those you highlight here.
Hi Greg, I recently found your channel and have been really enjoying your build videos. I picked up the Revell 1/32 Mosquito the other day - nowhere near the same standard - but I shall use this as reference for some added details! Cheers
By golly she looks good. I haven't done a model since 1978. I bought the Airfix 1/24 Hurricane kit and the companion book by Airfix Classic their History and how to model them. I followed along and heated the plastic. tree to make the tubular frame & wiring cutting all the panels to see all the details inside . I did not have an air brush so was hand painted. For its time it looked good. So 4 years ago I got the Tamiya 1/32 Mosquito and all the Eduard add on's plus their engines. So I have yet to start my Mosquito as it seem's so much over my head, never having worked with resin or photo etch or airbrushing. Now seeing your Mosquito do you have any tips to get started. By the way I live near Everett site of Paul Allen's fly Heritage Museum . I have photographed their Mosquito flying every summer on fly days along with the Hurricane, Spitfire & the FW -190 & the Bf-109 and many more WW2 aircraft. Is great to hear the sounds of the Rolls Royce as they fly by...
You have one of the best engineered kits available and because its so well engineered I'd advise following the instructions to the letter. The kit should literally fall together. Maybe take a look at some of the resin and photo etch tutorials on RUclips; but it does take a few models to get the feel for it. If I was new to resin and photo etch I'd start with a few smaller and cheaper models first until I got the hang of it. Hope this helps.
G'day Greg, A breathtaking build on this, my second favourite aircraft of all time. This will be seen as sacrilege, but I actually prefer the Mozzie over the Spitfire! Sure, the Spit is beautiful and more graceful than the Mozzie but I reckon this aircraft is like a 'double Spitfire', two Merlins and way more firepower, what's not to love? The whole design looks so wonderfully 'right'. The Mosquito could take any job thrown at it and eat it up with gusto. From benign photo ops to making tanks and .88 emplacements explode, yet it could manoeuvre acrobatically like a Pitts S-1/2 while showing its rear end to any fighter silly enough to try and catch it. Fighter, fighter/bomber, ground attack, bomber escort, pathfinder and even pulled off a jailbreak. About the only thing a Mozzie couldn't do was take on passengers! And to think, the Air Ministry and the RAF snubbed their noses at it, on paper. They refused to allocate special metals etc. that were going to bombers so it was made, mostly, with wood. This beurocratic indifference actually made the Mozzie fly faster. Once the RAF saw the Mozzie flying, they suddenly couldn't get enough of them. Congratulations, Greg! Apart from an outstandingly detailed and enhanced build, you are the first modeller I've ever seen on RUclips to make 'Invasion stripes' look the way they were painted in reality. I have dozens of pics of 'D-Day' or 'Invasion stripes' being painted by hand, with 6 or 8-inch brushes and big tins of paint. They were slapped on in a hurry as soon as the mission was outlined, not long before the crews were briefed. Apart from repainting roundels and any identifying markings which were important for in-battle identification, the aesthetic look of the paint job was last on the maintenance list. The only objective was to get the planes back in the air and make them as safe as possible for the pilots. I’m waiting on a Tamiya 1/32 Mozzie now and I’m more than a little intimidated by the excellence of your build, however, I like models that challenge me. My skill level is nowhere near yours but I know I’ll enjoy the build. If you say you had fun doing the Mozzie then I know I will too. The Westland Wessex is my favourite helo but after seeing your gobsmacking effort, that’s a kit I’ll not be doing in the foreseeable future. Given all the additional work you had to do, well, that's a little too close to scratch building for me. Besides, I’m no good at ‘plumbing’. I’ve never been lucky enough to see a Wessex up close so I was astounded at the array of ‘stuck-on’ wiring and ‘plumbing’. Anyway, I’m off topic and rambling now so I’ll get out of your way. Thanks again for your Mozzie build and all the best. Cheers, BH
I agree with you on the Mozzie; not a big fan of the Spit myself. The Tamiya Mosquito is a first-rate model, well-engineered and as long as the instructions are followed, shouldn't cause any issues. Thanks for your comments; they are very much appreciated, Greg.
@@paulrf4484 G'day Paul, Now, I've not heard of that before. I think it would have been a disastrous business decision for BOAC for, as far as I know, apart from the pilot and navigator, the Mozzie could have room for one passenger. Somewhere here on RUclips I've seen a documentary about some VIP; a scientist or an intelligence officer or some similar type, being squeezed into the small space behind the Skipper and the Nav. in a Mosquito. There was quite a bit of messing around with that space to take a person back there. I seem to recall he (or she, perhaps?) sort of had to sit on some blankets over the fuel tank. It must have been a pick up from somewhere in Europe as parachuting out of a serviceable Mozzie probably would be on that very short list of things the Mozzie couldn't do. If I find that documentary again I'll leave a message for you here on this video page. Cheers, and all the best from Tasmania. BH
Greg I forgot to ask how long did it take you to finish the Mosquito? What paint do you use and airbrush. I still need to buy an airbrush Do you use a single action brush .What do you use for weather? How long have you been modeling? I plan on painting my My Mosquito in Dark Sea gray ,extra dark sea gray and Sky underside. I would give a 10 out of 10 score.
It took me 4 weeks. There's a full build article in Model Airplane International Feb 2017 that will tell you everything I used and did to build the mosquito. Maybe its still available on 'back issue' through Doolittle Media? I use an Iwata Eclipse dual action airbrush. I have been modelling on and off since the age of 12 but picked it back up again in 2001.
Hi Greg! New to your channel. Say, what brand is the clamp which appears at 5:28, please? How are they called? I can't seem to be able to find them myself. Cheers mate!
Nice, Greg; thank you very much, my mate! Say, what was of your Welsh Models 1/72nd scale Boeing 737 AEW build videos? They were stunning! I really found helpful your trick of the foam to fill vac-form fuselages. I've been pondering on the use of it to fill the wings on the Aeroclub 1/48th scale Vulcan B.2 kit. Was thinking of ribbing the whole interior on each wing for strength, but it seems to me that the foam technique might as well work the same, while it's going to be a lot easier to do. Are you ever on Britmodeller, Greg? Cheers.
@@grahamkylevulcan4340 I've taken them off because I wasn't happy with them. As for the Vulcan wing maybe put a central spar in first to keep the cross section shape, then fill with foam. As for Britmodeller I'm under the name DenPhill, but on it very occasional, say hello.
I've always thought that invasion stripes shouldn't have super-crisp edges. After all most were done in a hanger by a bored erk who had a half a dozen to do before he finished for the day. So you can imagine that super accuracy was not on top of his list.
I have made the same observation in the past, in fact I seriously doubt all decals as being too perfect as is the surface detail which , once again, is too perfectly smooth and fails to address hollows, bumps and balloons ( tho apparently wing nut wings Lancaster included these details in their projected kit). But back to decals it doesn’t take too much searching around to find close up photos of how rough the invasion stripes were. Which then prompts one to look closely at ww1 a/c and notice that they were hand painted and as well as the edges being manually cut in there was also uneven build up of paint in the broader expanses of single colours. There is a huge area unexplored reality that is needed in decals apart from the amazing research that has provided us with such a variety of real markings in spirit if not in execution.
Overnight because the following days kerfuffle was "secret" with a drawing a tub of whitewash and a big old brush as tools. There are pics of day 1 but obviously some process was put into place to pretty things up later.
Hi, it's just air trapped under the decal caused by a rough surface. Will Pattison, a great modeller, has covered the subject in detail on his channel which hopefully will help.
a very nice model but for two things (1) the shape of the prop blades is all wrong (2) no raf planes during ww11 carried yellow tips to there blades and the blades were wide paddle shaped
What a beautiful piece of work that you have done, it’s a shame that most of the amazing work you have done is not on display. One of my favorite British aircraft, cheers, mate.
NAILED it.. a LOT of people always overdo the panel lines.. this is perfect.
Thank you once again for detailing another extraordinary build that becomes a masterpiece and lists the additional items necessary to turn into a museum quality model
Fabulous Greg. I missed your laid back narration but the workmanship is all there as usual. Top top result. Thank you.
Incredible work. You are a master of your craft.
Cheers 👍
You are a true artist my friend. Excellent work.
A beautiful model of a beautiful aircraft. When I first made models in the early seventies this kind of detail just didn't exist. Fantastic stuff. 👍
That is what you call artistry, simply amazing
I've just discovered your content today - where've you been hiding from my RUclips 'suggestions' feed all this time?! Absolutely breath-taking work that you put into everything you do, but especially here with the 'Wooden Wonder'. I cried a little bit, both in envy and at the sheer beauty of it. I can't wait to see your finished Chinook Mk1 either. Superlative skill from a true artisan.
Thanks Andy, very kind of you to say.
Another awesome thing, great especially it is with Polish checkeboards. ;) Perfect done! ;)
307 Dywizjon Myśliwski Nocny „Lwowskich Puchaczy” (No.307 Polish Night Fighter Squadron).
Sorry, mistake - this is an airplane model from 305 Polish Bomber Squadron (305 Dywizjon Bombowy „Ziemi Wielkopolskiej i Lidzkiej im. Marszałka Józefa Piłsudskiego").
@@waldemarkoziarczyk5018 This is SM, so it is 305th Ziemi Wielkopolskiej i Lidzkiej (Land of Greater Poland and Lida). ;)
Thank you! Cheers!
Greg I do wish you would do longer videos then again I have to stop work every time ! I keep saying it inspiration in whatever scale you build , oh and the figures are smashing too !! Regards Gav.
You're too kind Gav; you're making an old man blush.
Gobsmacked Greg. Such a lovely finish
Thank you Ed
Wow. What a professional job on a good kit !
Salute !
Thank you 👍
Seeing a lot of your work and how you do it is a real inspiration to start opening the boxes and getting to work. Thanks!
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know of a trick to log back into an Instagram account?
I was stupid lost my password. I would love any help you can give me
@Mekhi Beckett instablaster =)
@Andrew Alvaro I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im in the hacking process now.
Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
@Andrew Alvaro it worked and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much you really help me out!
@Mekhi Beckett No problem :D
Breathtaking work, I’ve just started in the hobby and watching this makes me want to give up LOL, I’ll never come close to this.
You can, have faith we all start from a position of no experience take your time watch and learn from others and you will develop your own skills and style.
Such a work of art.
Finally a modeller that doesn’t use exessive weathering.
Cheers John 👍
I'm glad someone's on my side! 👍
Sometimes less is more.
Magnificent! I'm building the 1/32 P-51D right now. I've used many Eagle-Cals products in the past and have the ones for Major George Preddy, Big Beautiful Doll and Old Crow. I will be building the Mosquito if I can find one. Really a beautiful job on this.
It's one of the best kits I have ever built, just fell together. And at some point, I must tackle the Tamiya 1/32 Birdcage Corsair. One I need to cross off my list 👍
@@GregsModels That one and both the MK IX and MK X Spitfire I will probably do a few more of the P-51's also. I loved the finger wag you did about the things getting smaller with age comment I almost fell off my chair.
Museum quality! This is a very good advert for Tamiya!!
Tamiya kits are well engineered and always thinking about the build process from a modeller's point of view. Just wish they'd produce other subjects rather than the mainstream aircraft. But I suppose they have to make products that appeal to everyone.
@@GregsModels ever try any Accurate Miniatures kits back in the day?
@@johnhood9567 Yes I had their range of B25's and Avenger. Nicely detailed and with care went to together ok. It was a long time ago though.
WOW!...The Joy is in the Details isn't it Greg👍👍
Great work on the interior and the engine. Especially the pipes look fantastic!!!
I built the Revell kit in this scale in the summer of 1977. It looked nothing like this kit -- it's amazing.
I loved this build, so inspirational, thanks a lot for sharing it. Your skill at painting and weathering is stunning .. would love to see a video of you explaining some of your painting techniques, when to use pastels, or water based paint, tips for weathering ... I must say that your painting of the engines and cockpit looks superb, will strive to learn how to do it on my models. Glad to be subscribed to your channel and greetings from Chile 😇
Thank you so much👍😎
A stunning model of a beautiful plane.
David R Lentz, Columbus, Ohio, USA (Saturday, 19 October, 2024)
I look forward to Tamiya issuing a 1:32nd-scale kit of de Havilland’s DH-98 Mosquito RAF Mk.IV bomber variant. Alternately, several of this kit you built n your RUclips video (had I the means), at least two, which I would convert (with the aid of a high-quality multimedia conversion/detail set) to a Mosquito Mk.IV light bomber, and at least one to a Mk.II PR photo-reconnaissance aircraft version. Also, several other Tamiya kits in this scale: the 1) early Chance Vought F4U Corsair USN/USMC/FAA Fighter series; 2) North American Aviation P-51 Mustang USAAF/RAF air superiority fighter series; 3) Supermarine Spitfire RAF Mk.V Fighter of several marks (Ia, Ib, Vc, VIII, IXc).
Also Airfix’s 1:24th-scale kit. And the assortment of aftermarket items parallelling those you highlight here.
Excellent! I got the Master barrels for the 1.24 Airfix Moz, works of art.
Impressive kit the Airfix Mozzie 👍
What a beautiful build sir love seeing the older aircraft being built and painted not so keen on the boring grey colours of nowadays
Thank you.
Fantastic job on that mozzie
Fabulous 🤗 well done
Hi Greg, I recently found your channel and have been really enjoying your build videos. I picked up the Revell 1/32 Mosquito the other day - nowhere near the same standard - but I shall use this as reference for some added details! Cheers
Nice work, great video, thanks.
Noticed it's a Mosquito flown by Polish pilots, truly stunning work.
Yes, thanks
Absolutely beautiful!
So glad to have found your channel. Liked and subscribed.
Thanks for sharing.
Nice details & weathering.
A superb Mossie.
Your work is absolutely stunning
By golly she looks good. I haven't done a model since 1978. I bought the Airfix 1/24 Hurricane kit and the companion book by Airfix Classic their History and how to model them. I followed along and heated the plastic. tree to make the tubular frame & wiring cutting all the panels to see all the details inside . I did not have an air brush so was hand painted. For its time it looked good. So 4 years ago I got the Tamiya 1/32 Mosquito and all the Eduard add on's plus their engines. So I have yet to start my Mosquito as it seem's so much over my head, never having worked with resin or photo etch or airbrushing. Now seeing your Mosquito do you have any tips to get started. By the way I live near Everett site of Paul Allen's fly Heritage Museum . I have photographed their Mosquito flying every summer on fly days along with the Hurricane, Spitfire & the FW -190 & the Bf-109 and many more WW2 aircraft. Is great to hear the sounds of the Rolls Royce as they fly by...
You have one of the best engineered kits available and because its so well engineered I'd advise following the instructions to the letter. The kit should literally fall together. Maybe take a look at some of the resin and photo etch tutorials on RUclips; but it does take a few models to get the feel for it. If I was new to resin and photo etch I'd start with a few smaller and cheaper models first until I got the hang of it. Hope this helps.
Wow ....out of this world, Fantastic
Great build
👍
Superb build
Anyone who gave a thumbs down is either a million times better or they're jealous and they get a thumbs down too! This guys' work is FABULOUS! 👏🍺
You're right! That really is a perfect kit!
G'day Greg, A breathtaking build on this, my second favourite aircraft of all time. This will be seen as sacrilege, but I actually prefer the Mozzie over the Spitfire! Sure, the Spit is beautiful and more graceful than the Mozzie but I reckon this aircraft is like a 'double Spitfire', two Merlins and way more firepower, what's not to love? The whole design looks so wonderfully 'right'. The Mosquito could take any job thrown at it and eat it up with gusto. From benign photo ops to making tanks and .88 emplacements explode, yet it could manoeuvre acrobatically like a Pitts S-1/2 while showing its rear end to any fighter silly enough to try and catch it. Fighter, fighter/bomber, ground attack, bomber escort, pathfinder and even pulled off a jailbreak. About the only thing a Mozzie couldn't do was take on passengers!
And to think, the Air Ministry and the RAF snubbed their noses at it, on paper. They refused to allocate special metals etc. that were going to bombers so it was made, mostly, with wood. This beurocratic indifference actually made the Mozzie fly faster. Once the RAF saw the Mozzie flying, they suddenly couldn't get enough of them.
Congratulations, Greg! Apart from an outstandingly detailed and enhanced build, you are the first modeller I've ever seen on RUclips to make 'Invasion stripes' look the way they were painted in reality. I have dozens of pics of 'D-Day' or 'Invasion stripes' being painted by hand, with 6 or 8-inch brushes and big tins of paint. They were slapped on in a hurry as soon as the mission was outlined, not long before the crews were briefed.
Apart from repainting roundels and any identifying markings which were important for in-battle identification, the aesthetic look of the paint job was last on the maintenance list. The only objective was to get the planes back in the air and make them as safe as possible for the pilots.
I’m waiting on a Tamiya 1/32 Mozzie now and I’m more than a little intimidated by the excellence of your build, however, I like models that challenge me. My skill level is nowhere near yours but I know I’ll enjoy the build. If you say you had fun doing the Mozzie then I know I will too.
The Westland Wessex is my favourite helo but after seeing your gobsmacking effort, that’s a kit I’ll not be doing in the foreseeable future. Given all the additional work you had to do, well, that's a little too close to scratch building for me. Besides, I’m no good at ‘plumbing’. I’ve never been lucky enough to see a Wessex up close so I was astounded at the array of ‘stuck-on’ wiring and ‘plumbing’.
Anyway, I’m off topic and rambling now so I’ll get out of your way.
Thanks again for your Mozzie build and all the best. Cheers, BH
I agree with you on the Mozzie; not a big fan of the Spit myself. The Tamiya Mosquito is a first-rate model, well-engineered and as long as the instructions are followed, shouldn't cause any issues. Thanks for your comments; they are very much appreciated, Greg.
Didn't BOAC use Mosquitos to carry a passenger . . ?
@@paulrf4484 G'day Paul, Now, I've not heard of that before. I think it would have been a disastrous business decision for BOAC for, as far as I know, apart from the pilot and navigator, the Mozzie could have room for one passenger. Somewhere here on RUclips I've seen a documentary about some VIP; a scientist or an intelligence officer or some similar type, being squeezed into the small space behind the Skipper and the Nav. in a Mosquito. There was quite a bit of messing around with that space to take a person back there. I seem to recall he (or she, perhaps?) sort of had to sit on some blankets over the fuel tank. It must have been a pick up from somewhere in Europe as parachuting out of a serviceable Mozzie probably would be on that very short list of things the Mozzie couldn't do. If I find that documentary again I'll leave a message for you here on this video page. Cheers, and all the best from Tasmania. BH
Glorious aircraft, beautiful model. I’ve one of those in the stash. Maybe it’s time.🤔🫣😄
Great work on this!!!
Cheers!
Brilliant! Hats off! Subscribed with a ringing bell! Great job Sir.
Greg I forgot to ask how long did it take you to finish the Mosquito? What paint do you use and airbrush. I still need to buy an airbrush Do you use a single action brush .What do you use for weather? How long have you been modeling? I plan on painting my My Mosquito in Dark Sea gray ,extra dark sea gray and Sky underside. I would give a 10 out of 10 score.
It took me 4 weeks. There's a full build article in Model Airplane International Feb 2017 that will tell you everything I used and did to build the mosquito. Maybe its still available on 'back issue' through Doolittle Media? I use an Iwata Eclipse dual action airbrush. I have been modelling on and off since the age of 12 but picked it back up again in 2001.
Stunning work.
Wow, that is terrific👍👍
Just lovely.😀
Simply stunning! 👏🏼
Another beauty.
Absolutely amazing !! Brilliant work !!
Would be a lot of after market details for me. I build all mine wheels up and hang them up.
Hi Greg! New to your channel. Say, what brand is the clamp which appears at 5:28, please? How are they called? I can't seem to be able to find them myself. Cheers mate!
I can't remember now they're very old. If you type in duel action ratchet clamps and see what comes up. Hope this helps.
Nice, Greg; thank you very much, my mate! Say, what was of your Welsh Models 1/72nd scale Boeing 737 AEW build videos? They were stunning! I really found helpful your trick of the foam to fill vac-form fuselages. I've been pondering on the use of it to fill the wings on the Aeroclub 1/48th scale Vulcan B.2 kit. Was thinking of ribbing the whole interior on each wing for strength, but it seems to me that the foam technique might as well work the same, while it's going to be a lot easier to do. Are you ever on Britmodeller, Greg? Cheers.
@@grahamkylevulcan4340 I've taken them off because I wasn't happy with them. As for the Vulcan wing maybe put a central spar in first to keep the cross section shape, then fill with foam. As for Britmodeller I'm under the name DenPhill, but on it very occasional, say hello.
Wow........just bloody wow....
Super build
Greetings from Poland
I fell in love aged 7. Forty odd years later my love is undiminished. One day I shall build this.
Brilliant just brilliant
Wow Greg that's awesome work Can you do a how to video on your techniques?! Literally said wow outloud amazing job
Stunning.
EVCELLENT MODEL IN 1/32 MOSQUITO!
Not sure if you are looking greg but you dont say which seat belts you used or was it a comb JMustg asbout to start another build
If memory serves me right, Eduard fabric ones.
Very nice
Beautiful!!! no more to say really.
Just starting out...is it common practice to prime all plastic parts while they are still attached to the frames..
Something that I don't do personally, however some modellers do but remember that you may have to sand some of your parts as you build.
I've always thought that invasion stripes shouldn't have super-crisp edges. After all most were done in a hanger by a bored erk who had a half a dozen to do before he finished for the day. So you can imagine that super accuracy was not on top of his list.
I have made the same observation in the past, in fact I seriously doubt all decals as being too perfect as is the surface detail which , once again, is too perfectly smooth and fails to address hollows, bumps and balloons ( tho apparently wing nut wings Lancaster included these details in their projected kit).
But back to decals it doesn’t take too much searching around to find close up photos of how rough the invasion stripes were. Which then prompts one to look closely at ww1 a/c and notice that they were hand painted and as well as the edges being manually cut in there was also uneven build up of paint in the broader expanses of single colours. There is a huge area unexplored reality that is needed in decals apart from the amazing research that has provided us with such a variety of real markings in spirit if not in execution.
Overnight because the following days kerfuffle was "secret" with a drawing a tub of whitewash and a big old brush as tools.
There are pics of day 1 but obviously some process was put into place to pretty things up later.
Świetnie zrobiony miło że w polskich barwach
Outstanding!
Hi, I'm new to scale modelling and was wondering what decal silvering is, and how to avoid it?
Hi, it's just air trapped under the decal caused by a rough surface. Will Pattison, a great modeller, has covered the subject in detail on his channel which hopefully will help.
Greg's Models Thanks, appriciated :)
Personally l like wacthing you build so this was a little different
The early videos are some photos used from my full build articles in magazines, mainly Model Airplane International.
Very surprised they never had a clear side fuselage
Super build of a great kit. Unfortunately it's way out of my budget, even before all the aftermarket stuff.
Same here. The kit and upgrades were given to me by Model Airplane International to build for an article for them.
a very nice model but for two things (1) the shape of the prop blades is all wrong (2) no raf planes during ww11 carried yellow tips to there blades and the blades were wide paddle shaped
Capt. Price
😍😍😍
Just a comment for the algorithm
Excellent !!!!!!!!
Just a comment
for the algorithm
Thank you 😎👍