I gave the model a base coat of paint last week, but due to not feeling overly great these last few days (not Covid-related, I assure you
) it took me until just now to continue. My normal way of painting is to do the basic colours and then weather over that, but for this one I decided to try a more artistic approach again, which I’ve done a few times before but not that often.
I started with some automotive primer over the etched parts, and that showed me why I stopped using that particular brand/type for my models … but for this one, it did the job.
Next, I wanted to apply an overall coat of the South African light sand colour that Trumpeter would have you mix from Gunze-Sangyo paints. I had bought a suitable bottle of airbrush-ready paint for this shortly after the kit, but when I came to paint the model, [syndrome=“advanced modeller”]I couldn’t find it anymore — that’s to say, I was looking at some of my sand-coloured paints and couldn’t remember which one I’d bought for this model[/syndrome] :rolling: I had to look it up online to discover that the bottle of Hataka A253 MRG Stone is the one I wanted. Anyway, with that problem resolved, I turned the model from grey to sand with a kind of greenish hue to it. Unfortunately, I forgot to take a photo of it in that state.
Next, this afternoon I put some more of that paint into my airbrush and mixed in about an equal amount of LifeColor UA 225 Light Stone 61, on the basis that I might just discover a use for this brand after all. I then proceeded to add lighter patches in the middle of most panels, as well as the top of the gun barrel, to highlight the model. After that I also sprayed some of that LifeColor paint straight to add even stronger highlights. The last step was to mix some Hataka MRG Stone with a drop of Vallejo 71.139 US Field Drab to produce a somewhat darker shade, which I airbrushed onto all the horizontal and many sloping surfaces on the underside, as well as around the edges of panels around the lower sides and the front plate, to create the same effect as on the top, but coming from the other side (shading the edges rather than highlighting the middle parts).
[ATTACH]379647[/ATTACH][ATTACH]379648[/ATTACH][ATTACH]379649[/ATTACH]
Ignore the hull bottom — I use that to test colour, paint thickness, whether the airbrush is even spraying at all, etc.

I started with some automotive primer over the etched parts, and that showed me why I stopped using that particular brand/type for my models … but for this one, it did the job.
Next, I wanted to apply an overall coat of the South African light sand colour that Trumpeter would have you mix from Gunze-Sangyo paints. I had bought a suitable bottle of airbrush-ready paint for this shortly after the kit, but when I came to paint the model, [syndrome=“advanced modeller”]I couldn’t find it anymore — that’s to say, I was looking at some of my sand-coloured paints and couldn’t remember which one I’d bought for this model[/syndrome] :rolling: I had to look it up online to discover that the bottle of Hataka A253 MRG Stone is the one I wanted. Anyway, with that problem resolved, I turned the model from grey to sand with a kind of greenish hue to it. Unfortunately, I forgot to take a photo of it in that state.
Next, this afternoon I put some more of that paint into my airbrush and mixed in about an equal amount of LifeColor UA 225 Light Stone 61, on the basis that I might just discover a use for this brand after all. I then proceeded to add lighter patches in the middle of most panels, as well as the top of the gun barrel, to highlight the model. After that I also sprayed some of that LifeColor paint straight to add even stronger highlights. The last step was to mix some Hataka MRG Stone with a drop of Vallejo 71.139 US Field Drab to produce a somewhat darker shade, which I airbrushed onto all the horizontal and many sloping surfaces on the underside, as well as around the edges of panels around the lower sides and the front plate, to create the same effect as on the top, but coming from the other side (shading the edges rather than highlighting the middle parts).
[ATTACH]379647[/ATTACH][ATTACH]379648[/ATTACH][ATTACH]379649[/ATTACH]
Ignore the hull bottom — I use that to test colour, paint thickness, whether the airbrush is even spraying at all, etc.

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