Shep Paine's work was always fantastic, he was a true pioneer. Although I've seen this diorama depicted in his books, I never realised there were actually two 251s in it.
Thanks for showing it here in all its glory, Chaz.
The tank looked dirty! How was that done?
I thought I had the answer.
I went out into the garden and carefully collected some soil in a pot, which I then took indoors and mixed it with tap water to make mud.
I then carefully applied said mud to my Tamiya German half-track with an old paint brush - and I thought it looked amazing.
Fast forward to next morning when I woke up to find that the mud had completely dried out and it looked ..... well ..... really crap .
You learn from your mistakes.
I was 12 years old.
- Steve
...But at the time we neither knew nor cared...
And what's great about "Red Sniper Hunt", and the Monogram dioramas, is that he used Tamiya's kit figures, and Monogram's, which are sneered at today by so many figure painters and modelers. I see comments about how bad they are, and I think of those dioramas. We need to remember that Shep wanted to encourage modelers, to show them what they could do with a kit, if they tried.
Prost!
Brad
And what's great about "Red Sniper Hunt", and the Monogram dioramas, is that he used Tamiya's kit figures, and Monogram's, which are sneered at today by so many figure painters and modelers. I see comments about how bad they are, and I think of those dioramas. We need to remember that Shep wanted to encourage modelers, to show them what they could do with a kit, if they tried.
Yes you are right about that, Shep and Verlinden probably did more than anyone else in terms of encouraging a whole generation of young modellers.
I must admit that I do chuckle at those old Tamiya figures these days, and I would never buy them now for the simple reason that the hobby has moved on massively since and there are far better ones available. But I chuckle at them in a fond and nostalgic way as opposed to sneering at them, because in their day they were the very best you could get and we didn't have back then what we have today.
- Steve