Great work Guy, I'm enjoying your SBS and watching how you build up your colours on the horse. You've done an excellent job bringing our the muscules and creating a sense of movement.
Thanks Mario & Tony for your feedback. Much appreciated.
I spent the last several days painting the horse accessories including the saddle bags, bedroll, canteen, stirrups and the rope and hatchet. It seems like the little small parts take forever to paint, but finally tonight I attached the small accessories to the horse.
Being that the rope and hatchet were a tight fit I attached the rope and hatchet at the same time as the Mountain Man.
Now its on to the rifle and the canteen along with some small areas of the horse itself. I have decided not to use the beaver skins and antler and will look for another roll in my spare parts box.
Guy, like a lot what you are doing with this great figure, very beautiful the colours choice for the horse , it seems very sauvage , also the leather dress of the trapper is very likely. Many compliments !!
Cool my friend - is pleasant all!
I for a long time look at various variants of painting - each figure searches for the variant of color. More precisely - each form has the color!
Forgive, I was possible poorly translation of language.
I very much like breed Pinto, but it is possible for this figure color of a horse light brown.
It not criticism, only opinion my friend.
Any case I see a fine variant of the author for painting!
Yours faithfully.
I have started preparing the base I will use and acquired a couple of cliff front bases from Ron Sanders, in Tulsa, Oklahoma but had to remove the wax sealer that was sprayed on the end grain (cliff) before I could paint it the color of granite. The bottom black base had to be removed to keep it from being ruined and put aside. The next step was to hold the base in a vise with cloth rag wrapped around the back so as not to ruin the finish and take a dremel flex-shaft with a wire bruse and remove all of the wax. After most was removed I took a small torch and lightly heated the cliff face so the remaining wax would run to the bottom and off the base. Needless to say this operation was done out in my garage workshop because it was extremely messy.
The wax is removed and the 1st of 2 coats of dark gray is painted over the cliff front of the base and set aside to dry for a few days.
Above is almost an identical base to the one the Mountain Man will be on. It has a black sub-base attached to the bottom which was held with screws and glue. I removed the screws and tapped the black base with a rubber mallet and it came right loose.
Above is the actual base with the wax removed and the 1st coat of dark gray enamel painted on. Once it is all done this base will be re-attached to the black sub-base again.
So you can get an idea of how the Mountain Man will look on this base I have placed him on the twin base that will be used for another mounted figure in another project. You can actually see the wax that I had to remove from the other base coated all over the cliff face portion.
Above is the actual base to be used without the bottom black sub-base re-attached back on. I have much more painting to do before I re-attach the sub-base.