When it's finished, should fit right in with my airfield diorama.That should be a nice build.
I will definitely take a look!!Just an FYI, I posted some unpublished photos of my father's C47 in the reference section just the other day. They aren't the greatest photos, but they are different.
Yeah, you have to be an old-timer like me to have been around for those 70s Monogram releases. They contracted with Shep to build dioramas of around a dozen kits and write the tips brochure. Monogram didn't extend that feature, sadly. But Shep took the content he wrote and later expanded it into his book, "How to Build Dioramas". That's worth tracking down and adding to your library.Yeah, that wasn't included, but thanks for posting the link!
The kit does come with a patch.
Ah, but for the simple reason:Looking good. You know… it's a shame you're not going to see all that once it's buttoned up.
I never paint interior crew areas, bomb bays if they're being closed up, in bombers, cargo planes, etc…
Such a terrible way to waste paint and effort when you're never going to see it once completed.
If it were a clear half option, yeah..it's worth it.
Just sayin'…
That's what a lot of folks say…Ah, but for the simple reason:
I know it's there
I'll sometimes wait to close interiors up until the household has had it shoved in there faces, me saying see!? Doesn't it look cool!? LolAh, but for the simple reason:
I know it's there
You beat me to it, DT!Ah, but for the simple reason:
I know it's there
Agreed, I may not go into hyper detail, but if you can look through a window or space, it will look finished inside.You beat me to it, DT!
Same here.
When Monogram released its B-17G, I got it for Christmas. My best friend, who lived next to us, got it, too.
We both started building the kit the day after Christmas. I looked forward to a fun project over Christmas break.
A day later, my friend said he'd finished building the kit and showed it to me. I asked if he finished the interior and he said, "No, no one's going to see it. Why are you finishing that stuff?"
And that was my answer, too: "I know it's there!"
My first experience with the question.
Seriously, back then, with the kits as they were, and the instructions written the way they were, naming parts and things like that, I learned a lot about the subject-what the crew spaces in a B-17 were like, or the fighting compartment of a tank, the bits and pieces of a V-8, from completing everything in the kit.
Today, I may decide to omit something in the interest of time, weighing it against other factors in the project. But very seldom, since I build for myself, rather than for a customer.
With me it's like having xray vision because I can see in my mind what is underneath and knowing there is something inside that I missed would just bug the hell out of me until I ripped it open and fixed it.Agreed, I may not go into hyper detail, but if you can look through a window or space, it will look finished inside.