Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-14 (Zoukei-Mura 1:32)

Wow! That is an insane amount of detail. I don't know if I could get through a kit that detailed. I must say I am very impressed with your patience and tenacity in that build. I would have been frustrated trying to get it all together and making it look as good as you have.
I'm using it as means of forcing myself to slow down. It is a character-flaw that extends to everything not just models.

There are many parts of my modeling "game" that need attention, I could be wrong, but I think learning to be slower and more patient will help solve several of them.

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It did hurt to seal up so much detail. I had to take great care in assembly, but not so much painting for things that no human will ever see.
 
things that no human will ever see
I generally leave out everything that will never be seen. A Zoukei-Mura kit would not be great for me, I suspect I would need to get a new spares box for plane parts if I ever did build one :)
 
The peculiarity of ZM kits is that you build what probably is the nearest approximation possible of the real thing. The troblesome wing, landing gear and fuselage junction described a few days ago is, as far as I know, almost the same designed by Willy Messerschmitt and his team. I find this very fascinating, but I understand Jakko point.
 
I'm ready to move to the next step, a clear coat prior to decals.

But...

I'm worried this is too dark. So I changed the dark gray shown initially to the correct dark green (dunkelgrun or something like that), the ZM instructions had it printed correctly in the text, but the color printing of the camo showed two different grays. Well, that issue averted, yikes!

So I know it is hard to see a picture alone and know what the actual color is, as in if present. So I put another kit (WIP) next to it for reference, and I think it shows how relatively dark the upper camo is.

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Kinda funny how the scale difference makes these two enemies look the same size. But both aircraft show a bare uncoated layer of XF acrylics.
 
I talked myself out of the mistake I talked myself into. The dark green was too green despite what is shown in Squadron-Signal according to most people.

So back to a dark grey albeit with a hint of green.

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Those 4 little jars are there to show the dark green next to the dark gray, the light blue and medium grey just for reference.

The Corsair is back on the bench because I broke the wing off moving it around...grrr.

I did finish that Sturmovik as well. Not worth it's own thread so I'll hijack my own. I'm, pretty unhappy with "Accurate Miniatures" overall, but I'd stop short of saying they suck. I was not familiar with the brand (been out of the hobby for almost 30 years) but I picked it up at the local model show for $10. Overall fit was good with a few really bad gaps, so I'd say average as a final score on fit. The instructions had lots of words, almost conversational advice in some places, but the instructions were the worst part zero indication how some parts fit, and in some places there was no provision to mount the part, so even with the words it was a guess. Plus some parts were left over ands there was no floor for the rear gunner. Still looks okay on the shelf and from a distance.

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I made a rear-floor out of paper (a post-it note actually) and painted it. Notice there's no glass over the rear gunner?

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It must be some kind of manufacturing defect, both rear sections (2 variants) had similar damage on them. I thought it was supposed to be some sort of camo net, but that's ridiculous. The parts were sealed in the bags, and none of the other three parts had this issue. I read that crews would often remove the rear section during summer months, so I went with that and left it off.

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There was nice detail on the front cockpit, just hard to see in there.

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I think my blue is a bit on the bright side, but only a little.
 
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