Finished Photos of 1/48 Scale B-17G Diorama "The Final Landing"

Phillip1

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Fellow Modelers,

Below are photos of my 1/48 scale B-17G diorama titled "The Final Landing". It was built in 2011. The setting shows a war-weary B-17 coming back to its English airfield after another dangerous mission over Germany in 1944. The aircraft made a successful landing and was taxiing to its assigned parking location when failure of the right main landing gear caused it to swerve off the runway into the grass. I went to great lengths to duplicate the famous diorama that Master Modeler Sheperd Paine built for Monogram Models in 1975, which was featured in a four-page color brochure included with their B-17G kit. Hand painting the artwork on the nose of the aircraft was one of the features I was not able to reproduce. Several aftermarket resin and photo-etch details sets were used on the Monogram B-17G. About 75% of the total project time was spent building and painting the airplane, as it was heavily modified. The base is 3/4" thick plywood. The ground-work is Sculptamold, mixed with water and food coloring. The concrete runway is sand sprinkled over white glue. Only a couple of the kit's crew members had to be modified to match the original diorama. The entire project took me six months to build. I am still blown away by the fact that Paine built his diorama in about two weeks! The last few photos were taken while the build was "in-progress". I hope you enjoy the photos.

Phillip1





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You did a nice job reproducing Shep's diorama, it's a nice tribute to him! Well done!
Shows that you're not afraid of figures, too ;)
 
Yes, well done on recreating that diorama, I remember it well. I still have an old Fine Scale Modeler book by Shep Paine.17334322425634555096707217628667.jpg
 
Back in 1976 or so while stationed at RAF Mildenhall, I built the 1/48 B-17G "Chow Hound". I really enjoyed this piece of history on the soil where these airman were flying from.
 
Cold War USAF guy-Yes, it must have been amazing to have been there and thank you for your service.

Phillip1
 
Cold War USAF guy-Yes, it must have been amazing to have been there and thank you for your service.

Phillip1
You're welcome. I was there 3 years and did a little bit of sight seeing. 1 week's leave with a buddy driving up to Inverness, Scotland where Loch Ness is on the way. Great photos! Took a trip to Denmark across the North Sea on a Friday night and the next day we were taken to a little village where none of the businesses were open on Saturday. Bummer! However, the Dagmar Hotel was open and we had lunch there. Then I also visited Sembach AB, Germany for 71 days TDY which was really great! Bigger and better accommodations than Mildenhall and the best chow hall in all of US Air Forces in Europe. Then there was the trip behind the iron curtain to Rumania. That was a real eye opener. Part of the tour was to see Bran Castle, the home of Vlad "the Impaler". This ruler was the source of the Dracula story. He as quite a brutal fellow, especially to the Turks that kept attacking them.
 
FANTASTIC WORK!

This is very reminiscent of a flyer I had in the 1970s featuring Shepard Paine. I think it came inside Monogram boxes back then.
 
Amazing job! Diorama, plane and figures are outstanding. Congratulations!!
 
Fellow Modelers,

Below are photos of my 1/48 scale B-17G diorama titled "The Final Landing". It was built in 2011. The setting shows a war-weary B-17 coming back to its English airfield after another dangerous mission over Germany in 1944. The aircraft made a successful landing and was taxiing to its assigned parking location when failure of the right main landing gear caused it to swerve off the runway into the grass. I went to great lengths to duplicate the famous diorama that Master Modeler Sheperd Paine built for Monogram Models in 1975, which was featured in a four-page color brochure included with their B-17G kit. Hand painting the artwork on the nose of the aircraft was one of the features I was not able to reproduce. Several aftermarket resin and photo-etch details sets were used on the Monogram B-17G. About 75% of the total project time was spent building and painting the airplane, as it was heavily modified. The base is 3/4" thick plywood. The ground-work is Sculptamold, mixed with water and food coloring. The concrete runway is sand sprinkled over white glue. Only a couple of the kit's crew members had to be modified to match the original diorama. The entire project took me six months to build. I am still blown away by the fact that Paine built his diorama in about two weeks! The last few photos were taken while the build was "in-progress". I hope you enjoy the photos.

Phillip1





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Great build, great detailing. Pantherman
 
ssgteverett/blakeh1/Edbert/GCB/Pantherman-Thahks for the compliments!

blakeh1-Thanks for including the exhaust staining information, as it will be helpful in the future.

Phillip1
 
GCB-All the figures came from the Monogram B-17G kit, except the one leaning out of the open nose hatch. I got him from my spare parts stash, but cannot remember what model he came with.

Phillip1
 
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