Image Comments |
Creosotewind | 15-Nov-11 10:58 |
I "painted" the tank with pastels using medium and light olive green to fade the paint, and charcoal and black for shadow effects. I also used rust and tan for weathering and aging the paint. The USMC, "ANN" and serial numbers are R.R. rub on letters. The turret number is hand painted. |
Creosotewind | 15-Nov-11 11:01 |
In addition, some edges were rubbed with graphite to replicate worn edges of steel. This model is somewhat representative of an M4A2 Sherman that saw battle on Iwo Jima. I'll have additional photos later this week. |
Dfell | 15-Nov-11 11:12 |
Really really good!! - you kind of forget it's made of wood & card. |
frwyflyer | 15-Nov-11 11:18 |
Absolutely amazing that out of a chunk of wood, bits and pieces this emerged |
John M Oshust | 15-Nov-11 12:09 |
Superb, magnificent, wonderful! |
hjlittman | 15-Nov-11 14:33 |
This model harks back to the days of WWII when almost all modeling, static, movable and flying was done with pine and card stock. Well done! |
John M Oshust | 15-Nov-11 15:14 |
Have you shot the gun yet????? |
Roring40 | 15-Nov-11 18:25 |
Absolutely faultless work ! The best Sherman model I have ever seen ! |
poppy | 16-Nov-11 04:29 |
Beautifully crafted. The WOW factor on this one is off the chart. I once built a plastic kit of the Sherman that was not as realistic as this one, and most of us know that plastic kits have lots and lots of little details. This one has them all, hand crafted. JFB!!!!!! |
John M Oshust | 16-Nov-11 16:04 |
Hear, hear....you built this tank. You did not assemble parts from a mold! |
David Duckett | 16-Nov-11 17:45 |
"Hear, hear" here. |
Creosotewind | 16-Nov-11 17:56 |
Thanks for the comments, everyone. I have a few more images to post, if that's ok. |
frwyflyer | 16-Nov-11 19:13 |
I would like view more photo's |
FLYBOYZ | 16-Nov-11 19:22 |
What a beauty! |