Monday, 4 January 2010

Too much alcohol, fattening food and the like, and I STILL managed to get work done on this kit. It's infectious. Everytime you see it, it screams at you to build it.

I removed all the parts for the cockpit and after cleaning, stuck them all in a pot for safe-keeping. Next up, the areas which were to be painted interior green were done just that, using Gunze BS283 Interior Green. There's not too much colour inside a Spit, so the plethora of parts which needed the Black treatment were painted again in Gunze. I love this paint and it's rapidly taking over as my favourite brand from my usual enamels.






All the smaller parts were then painted using other modellers builds as a reference, alongside internet research, the Tamiya call-outs and the Tamiya colour booklet which came with the kit. The instrument panel is amazing. All the glass dials come in plates which have a decal affixed to their rear. I stuck this on with a brush full of Klear to make sure it didn't just peel off when dry. The forward smaller panel is made from finely etched metal.

Items in aluminium were sprayed in Alclad Airframe Aluminium and various parts were painted in brass, red, yellow etc, and were done with diluted Vallejo acrylics.



 

The interior was screaming out for placards to be added, and as Tamiya had suplied none, I used the wonderful Mike Grant Decals 1/32 Instrument sheet to do this, and they were perfect. Screwed a couple up because they are micro thin, but the finish was more than worth it.





 The interior was then sealed with Klear and set to dry for 24 hours to cure. All interior panel lines where then shaded with Tamiya Smoke and left to dry a few hours. I like living by the seat of my pants, so did an oil wash of Raw Umber to accentuate the panel lines and other detail internally. A clat of flatt varnish then sealed everything up. The interior parts then had their cockpit colour highlights added using Tamiya Weathering Pastels. This seems easier and less risky than adding yellow to the base colour and attempting to lighten in that manner.



 

 The seat is sprayed in Humbrol 70 brown/red and given a wash of different colour browns in an attempt to create that mish-mash bakelite colour they had. I might try to make a padded seat cushion yet from the wonderful Filla-Glu epoxy putty. Two more parts from etch metal create the armoured back and head rests. Lovely stuff!


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