Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
4 hours ago, Jackster said:

Very very nice work Pete! Excellent weathering technique!

Cheers

Kev

Thanks, The light I'm using is pretty bright so over-does how it looks in natural light. I'm finding weathering armor to be super fun. 

  • Like 3
Posted

Here are some shots of my Ferret being worked on...you can see how much weathering 61 years of use has created.

B524A502-BBFE-4B72-BC5F-B92B7F9515B1.jpeg

24569677-825C-4ACC-833D-C42D86CF272F.jpeg

  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Posted

The kit has incredible brake, marker and turn signals. The light lenses were to be glued on to painted silver backing. I used canopy glue but the seal became air tight. I don’t know if it will ever dry clear :(

9E58E6A5-4721-4826-A4FF-FC0DC672780D.jpeg

  • Like 4
Posted
46 minutes ago, PeteF said:

The kit has incredible brake, marker and turn signals. The light lenses were to be glued on to painted silver backing. I used canopy glue but the seal became air tight. I don’t know if it will ever dry clear :(

9E58E6A5-4721-4826-A4FF-FC0DC672780D.jpeg

It looks great!  I started to use canopy glue until I discovered it never really hardens...  dries clear but rubbery.  I use kitchen foil for the backing of lights...gives a bit more reflection than paint.  And if you don;t like foil, the Molotow Chrome pen works really nice, too.

  • Like 3
Posted

To show how small a Ferret is, here it is "parked" next to my same scale (1/24) Mosquito in my office:

IMG_1281.thumb.JPG.cc9a6214b2c92ea380cbf4c071c96272.JPGiun

  • Like 3
  • Confused 1
Posted
On 12/4/2020 at 2:17 PM, PeteF said:

The photo is a bit deceptive. The real Ferret is about the size of a regular car so the model is “small” but the scale is large. It’s about 6” long.

76C9BE5D-B6C4-4627-BD1D-FCFCE7E5C748.jpeg

This is looking stunning, great to someone else owns a set of Schaedler rules, aren’t they just beautiful.....

  • Like 3
Posted
Just now, Bomber_County said:

This is looking stunning, great to someone else owns a set of Schaedler rules, aren’t they just beautiful.....

My wife and I were traditional graphic designers prior to switching to Mac in 1987. This is one of the few things we have remaining from that era of our lives.

  • Like 2
Posted

Traditional graphic designers are few and far between. Many years ago I worked for Pentagram in London with the great Alan Fletcher and all the original partners, very talented guys......

  • Like 3
Posted
48 minutes ago, Bomber_County said:

Traditional graphic designers are few and far between. Many years ago I worked for Pentagram in London with the great Alan Fletcher and all the original partners, very talented guys......

Whilst not a graphic designer by trade, I only got rid of my Staedtler drawing table in the last house move ... Still has the Rotrings however.

 I am still an old school thinker when it comes to computer graphics, though. Which is why I am utterly lost with softwares like Blender ... WOT ? You do not start with dimensions and tolerances :raincloud: ?
 

Hubert

  • Like 4
  • Haha 1
Posted

I know where you're coming from Hubert. My son uses Blender all the time and it just seems totally counter intuitive to me but he does produce some stunning stuff with it.

  • Like 3
Posted

I learnt my trade similar to Peter over a drawing board or layout table, talk to young designers about first and third angle projection and they look at you as if you have three heads............

  • Like 2
Posted

Even though I was "done" I wasn't quite done. Worked on the straps on the engine hatch today...last little details getting taken care of.IMG_1292.thumb.jpg.3234734d12973fbbcb7aa8a279098ff2.jpg

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Posted
12 hours ago, PeteF said:

Even though I was "done" I wasn't quite done. Worked on the straps on the engine hatch today...last little details getting taken care of.

Having the real one in the backyard, there are no excuses for less attention to the details :D. Your build looks like the real thing as far as I can tell, bravo.

Cheers Rob

  • Like 4
Posted
7 hours ago, DocRob said:

Having the real one in the backyard, there are no excuses for less attention to the details :D. Your build looks like the real thing as far as I can tell, bravo.

Cheers Rob

Considering I'm building for the guys who are doing the restoration, they'd totally notice anything that wasn't scale...certainly puts extra pressure on it. There is typically a water "Jerry" can on the left rear fender. The one it the kit didn't fit well but I have it modified to go so I just need to paint it and attach it.

 

  • Like 5

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...