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The Cat That Never Scratched

PAINTING AND WEATHERING

Aside from the tank which I spray painted with a base color of olive drab, everything else was hand painted using acrylic colors and a little of tamiya enamel paints. One thing I learned in painting specially the figures is that acrylic paints don’t settle on bare plastic, that’s why I undercoated it with tamiya enamel paint of dark yellow. My background in painting ( I graduated with a degree in fine arts major in painting ) specially with oil mediums helped me in my process of painting the scene. Everything in the dio is painted with base colors. My usual way of painting the details is working my way from dark tones going to the lightest of tones. After achieving my desired colors, I started washing everything with earth colors and finaly black to make an inconsistent color finish on everything. One tip I can give in is that no object has a consistent flat color. Objects must have varying shades of the base color to make it look realistic. After washing everything… I started to dry brush the burnt effect on everything I wanted to look burned using black. And for my final touch I sprinkled the garden soil and made sure that it accumulates in nooks and corners. Think how gravity works when doing this, dust accumulates on areas not usually disturbed and at flat surfaces. I also used this soil to weather the tank by adding dilluted glue to it and applying it with a brush. I made the rust effect using acrylic colors of burnt sienna top with yellow ochre applied in thick patches.

The burnt out completely destroyed tank in my dio is made out of a thick sheet of aluminum foil which I formed into the underchassis of a tank. I used all the spare wheel rods of my panther and glued it in place.

Copyright ©2002 - Text and Photos by Christopher Magsino. All Rights Reserved.

Project Photos
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About the Author

About Cris Magsino (crismag)
FROM: LUZON, PHILIPPINES

Cris Magsino is Computer Graphic Design artist who runs his own Design Company and spends most of his very limited free time doing scale model kits, mostly of cars, but has ventured on doing some military related dioramas.


Comments

A lot of nice tips for the aftermarket-deprived diorama builder
SEP 26, 2002 - 02:58 PM
Excellent work! Liked the tip about the flower pots, always like a tip like this that can be used by everyone. Can't wait for your next one. Robbo
SEP 26, 2002 - 03:40 PM
Really nice work. Suggestion: I don't know specifically about the Panzerfaust, but it was rocket powereed, I believe. Rockets have back blast and if he's going to fire it off, the guy coming up behind him could be toast. I learned this concept from a 20 National Guard Capt. (Ret) who gave me references on the TOW and who was trained in using the LAW. (If I remember correctly, the TOW has to have 75 meters of clearance directly behind it before being fired or somebody's day is going to be ruined )
SEP 26, 2002 - 09:24 PM
A very nice diorama. I am impressed with the way you crafted the burned out tank. Very clever work. I can't wait to see more of your work.
SEP 27, 2002 - 04:47 AM
Good job Chris. (:-)
SEP 27, 2002 - 09:00 PM
Nice work. I just saw an episode of 'band of brothers" on tv last night. Almost identical scene (yet other tank types) in there. Good tips. Jan
SEP 27, 2002 - 11:38 PM
Chris, I see that you mentioned that you didn't learn that this particular Panther varient was not used during the war until after completing the dio. I think this is the DML Panther F kit, correct? Or maybe the Panter II kit (that is almost the same as the F)? This was the first armor kit I built too, about three years ago. And, I also didn't realize it was a "fictional" kit until it was completed! But, it does go together nice. One big error is the turret (I think the German word for this particular one is 'Schmalturn' or something). You can see how it actually overhangs the hull on two edges. That's incorrect. If you have the German Tanks of WWII book, there are some nice photos of this Panther prototype and some nice photos of this new turret including an overhead shot that clearly shows that the turret does not overlap. I think it would be really hard to correct this without some major work... Really good job on the kit and dio! Even though this Panther never really existed, I think it looks really great! And, I know those DML track links are a pain and time consuming but don't they look nice after all the hard work?!?! You'll never want to use the 'rubber bands' now! Hope to see more! Steve
SEP 28, 2002 - 01:20 PM
thank you all guys for your kind comments i have a new dio nearly finished now. everything in it is scratch built including my ruins and buildings....in 1:72 scale! ill be posting pics within this week again thanks!
SEP 29, 2002 - 07:37 AM
Very good work! You can just call this a Panzer '46 dio. One point, is the burned out tank upside down? If it is I don't think there would have been any camo on the bottom just the orginal primer color.
OCT 02, 2002 - 01:41 AM
Good first dio effort you can only improve from here on. and if the war lasted any longer this cat could have been a painful reality for the allies.
SEP 01, 2003 - 10:48 AM