Marktastrophe
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2021
- Messages
- 371
Thanks. I've found some older promo stuff, and a couple of photos of the few hundred dollar Showa Godzilla Anniversary figure from Bandai. Not sure how closely I want to stick to them.Maybe check some "fanart" or other illustrations.
Nice! What kind of painting did you do for the green body?
Rattle cans of black primer, hunter green, then camo green (random spray) with a black washNice! What kind of painting did you do for the green body?
OK, it's very subtle. I think it works really well to accomplish the rubber suit effect you were going for!Rattle cans of black primer, hunter green, then camo green (random spray) with a black wash
Another way to deal with seams is to use the extrusion or "squeeze" technique. This is useful on parts like Godzilla's legs, left and right fuselage halves, pieces where you've got a long seam.The seams on Godzilla are pretty gross. I have very little experience fixing seams, so this will be good Tamiya basic putty practice...
Those are all great tips! I've used the glue method before... but the only plastic cement I have on hand evaporates too quickly for this technique this time :/Another way to deal with seams is to use the extrusion or "squeeze" technique. This is useful on parts like Godzilla's legs, left and right fuselage halves, pieces where you've got a long seam.
You hold the parts together and flow liquid styrene cement into the seam, letting capillary action draw the cement in. Then apply pressure along the seam, till a bead of melted plastic is extruded along the seam. When the glue and plastic have cured, you can scrape that bead away, leaving a minimal seam that requires very little cleanup.
I like that method, where I can use it, because the join is homogeneous, unlike joins where I have to apply putty or other fillers.
A similar method is to use stretched sprue to fill any seams. I'll use the kit sprue, so again, it's the same material as the parts. Stretch some sprue, then lay the pieces into the seam, and run liquid styrene cement along the seam. Again, when the glue has cured, it's a solid join of kit plastic.
That's not to say that putty doesn't have its place, either. But it's good to have multiple arrows in your quiver.
Hope that helps!
Best regards,
Brad