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Dumas Kit #233. MiG 17 by BriandKilby. Viewed 674 times.
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Image Comments
BriandKilby31-Aug-14 16:53
this is the mig camoflage o
David Duckett31-Aug-14 16:57
That's Chinese.
BriandKilby31-Aug-14 18:32
I was trying for the Vietnamese plane. can you help me out dd?
David Duckett31-Aug-14 20:02
My bad, that is in Vietnamese colors. Sorry. I'll get you a link.
David Duckett31-Aug-14 20:03
http://wp.scn.ru/en/ww3/f/12/55
BriandKilby01-Sep-14 08:11
thanks dd!
BriandKilby03-Sep-14 08:48
question for dd or anyone. when you do your camouflage do you estimate what colors to paint it in if it doesn't tell you to? do you try shades of colors until you get it?
David Duckett03-Sep-14 08:53
Yes and yes.
Creosotewind03-Sep-14 12:31
Brian, some modelers will "scale" their colors (the smaller the scale, the lighter the color) and have impressive formulas to achieve that. In the real world, colors are mixed to a formula (sort of), often by soldiers in the field. Age, grime, light conditions when a photo was taken, how the photo was reproduced, etc. all play into what it all looks like. The way you described the process (and as David agreed) is the best way to achieve a good look. We sometimes forget this is a hobby, and meant to be fun. Enjoy!
Creosotewind03-Sep-14 12:35
I forgot to mention, during WW2 the Germans had a field applied camp paint that arrived in paste form. It could be mixed with water or gasoline and painted on the tank. Or, I guess, it could even be smeared on. How diluted it became was up to the "artist." I have also seen pictures of American tankers painting their M5 Stuart tank with a spray gun, applying black camp over olive drab. And over the caked in mud, tarps, gear, gas cans. They left everything on the tank as they sprayed! Good thing no one was napping on the tank at the time.
David Duckett03-Sep-14 12:57
I've seen some models which look as if that's the way they were painted, albeit with a brush, or broom. Going from what "they tell you" bottle/can colors to mixing your own is like finally getting out of diapers.
BriandKilby03-Sep-14 13:49
very interesting and informative creo and dd. thanks for the insight.
Creosotewind03-Sep-14 15:07
I actually did use a toothbrush (an old one, not the one I used on my teeth) to paint the streaked finish on a Fokker Dr.1 Triplane. It was the only thing I had that would get that effect. Different (brush) strokes for different folks.
David Duckett03-Sep-14 18:58
A sponge would have worked:)
Creosotewind04-Sep-14 11:12
Different sponge stokes for different folks.
David Duckett04-Sep-14 11:37
What was the question?
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