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Dragon King Tiger #6232 work in Progress.

wds

Active member
This was my first kit by Dragon. I have only built Tamiya previously.
It was a straight forward out of the box build. I like the photo etch engine grills and the included 4-figure set. The tracks were a different matter though. Again, my first time with individual track links. What a pain in the brain. I assembled them in sections so that I could paint them off the vehicle. (I don’t know how you folks paint them on the vehicle). When I put a wash on them, they fell apart. This is not what I signed up for. I’m looking forward to assembling a recently purchased kit (Panther D #6299) with the “Magic” tracks.

The ambush paint scheme is a straight –up rip off of one done on a Tamiya Jagtiger by John Plzak in the May 09 issue of fine scale modeler magazine. I don’t know if it is historically accurate or not. I just thought it looked cool. I brushed the camo because I couldn’t get a soft edge out of my VL without it spitting unless I ran the paint so diluted that I would have to go over every edge five times (no good).

I have put some brown and black pin washes on the details, and have done a little dry brushing. It needs scratches and weathering and a host of other work, but I’m inexperienced at this. I think I will shelve this one for the time being and wrap it up when I feel more confident.

Please feel free to comment and make suggestions. Thanks for reading.

Bill

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I think that looks really, really good. No harm in setting it aside till you feel more confident about weathering etc. I'm willing to bet someone here will offer some suggestions on the weathering, I would but I suck at it ;)


Tom
 
Very nice, Bill! I like the color scheme very much and the construction looks quite clean! Some WIP pix next time, maybe?? (y)
 
It looks sharp.

If you really want to experiment, find something in the stash you'll never really see yourself getting into much, paint it up and weather it. Then respray it and weather it again with other techniques etc.

After doing that a few times, you'll know what works for you and what doesn't without taking the chance of ruining this beauty.

That's my two cents anywho.

Nice work.
 
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