Thursday, October 31, 2019

His Mother Was The Lightning!

FRANKENSTEIN by Polar Lights
Built 1/2018
Painted 10/30/2019


"It's alive. It's alive... alive!"

It must be the season, because I felt compelled to finish up another monster kit - the fourth this month! Here's my Polar Lights 90s repop of the classic Aurora Frankenstein. As with the Aurora Godzilla, I gave Frankie the traditional green skin. The only real customization here was the addition of some scenic foliage to the base.


As usual, this was painted with 100% cheap craft store acrylics by hand.

 

Sunday, October 27, 2019

On the Moon! Jim, Doc, we're on the Moon!

LUNA by Pegasus Models
Built 12/2017
Painted 9/10/2018
Base 10/27/2019


This simple kit of a classic spacecraft was one of the two - along with the Rocketship X-M, also from Pegasus - that inspired me to finally get back into model building, back around Christmas of 2017. As with the X-M, I assembled it and painted it long ago, but I didn't consider it "completed" until I made a custom display base for it. The kit did come with a lunar surface base, but it didn't resemble the cracked, jagged terrain depicted in the 1950 Destination Moon film, so I didn't want to use it.

Anyway, last night I broke out a fresh box of Super Sculpy and went to work. I'm pretty pleased with how it turned out.




Friday, October 25, 2019

Grotto of the Gill-Man!

CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON by Polar Lights
Built 1/2018
Painted 10/24/2019


Another classic Aurora Monster kit (in this case, another Polar Lights repop from the later 90s) gets finished. I never had these models as a kid, so it's nice to finally build them.

Between this and the Nosferatu kit, I feel like I'm finally getting the sort results that I want.  Because paints made specifically for modellers are usually pricey, I work exclusively with cheap acrylic craft paints from Michael's. To get the gold shimmer on Creech's scales, I used a very light wash of what's called "color-shift" paint, which changes color depending on how the light hits it -  in this case, from green to gold. I used a little on the lizard, too, which is why the pics show a bit of an aqua shift on the otherwise red reptile.

The base is covered with real sand, lightly washed in brown and tan paints. I filled the little cave behind Creech with some dried reindeer moss from the craft store, just to add a little Amazonian foliage to the scene.


Monday, October 21, 2019

The Precious Blood!

NOSFERATU by Monarch Models
Built 11/18/2018
Painted 10/21/2019

With this, I have now completed all four kits produced by the much-missed Monarch Models. In fact, I searched a long time for this elusive kit, until my friend Terry Beatty (an esteemed modeller in his own right), traded this to me. As with their other kits, this was beautifully engineered, and went together smooth as silk.

This was the "Frightening Lightning" edition, which came with some parts duplicated in glow-in-the-dark plastic. I chose not to use those parts, with the exception of the spare rats (more on this below). I also chose not to use the provided nameplate.

For the base, Monarch provided a bunch of creepy-crawlies, including spiders and centipedes, but, when I think of Nosferatu, I think of rats. I used the all of the rats in the kit (two regular plastic and two glow) and then scavenged a couple more, smaller rats from another kit (Dark Shadows' Barnabas Collins), to provide Count Orlok with a small army of rodents.

As usual, this was painted with cheap, acrylic craft paints.


Thursday, October 17, 2019

Up From The Depths!

GODZILLA by Polar Lights
Built 1/5/2018
Painted 10/16/2019

This was the first of the classic Aurora Monster Models (in this case, a late-90s repop from Polar Lights) I assembled back when I first started getting back into model building, and it's sat on a shelf ever since. But after Gorgo and the T-Rex, I felt a lot more confident about painting giant lizards, so I pulled it down off the shelf and slapped some paint on it.

As this is "Aurora Godzilla" - as opposed to any of the Toho Films Godzillas... or the "Hanna-Barbara Godzilla"... or the "Marvel Comics Godzilla"... you get the idea - I decided to paint him the way this kit has traditionally been painted, i.e. green. I have two other Godzilla kits that are more Toho-accurate, so I'll probably paint those movie charcoal gray when I get to them. 

I didn't do a lot of gradients or anything fancy with this one, but I did give the whole guy a pretty heavy black wash, and then highlighted the fins and forehead with some drybrushed olive green.

Flashback '79: Draconia's Finest

MARAUDER by Monogram
Built 1979

Another spaceship model from my youth, this is probably the best job I ever did on a kit at the time, and, surprisingly, it holds up today! This is the Draconian Marauder (a/k/a the Hatchet Fighter) from the NBC/Universal television series, Buck Rogers In the 25th Century. It's not very accurate to the filming model, but it's an attractive kit, and I'm glad it survived.


Sunday, October 13, 2019

The Ghost Who Walks!

THE PHANTOM by Atlantis Models
Built 10/29/2018
Painted 10/2019

It took just under a year from the time I built this Atlantis Models re-issue of the 60's Revell Phantom model kit to when I finally finished it. It took me a while to find just the right purple spray paint for his costume, but once I did, I faced another concern -- the kit came with a lousy, flat piece of plastic for a base. Essentially, it was just something to glue the heroe's boots to so he wouldn't topple over.

This didn't sit right with me (neither did the vaguely racist "Witch Doctor" figure included in the kit), so I put it off while I pondered what I wanted to do.

Ultimately, I decided to create a new, more scenic, diorama base from scratch. I quickly sculpted it from some Super Sculpy, baked it, and painted it. I added some moss, dried leaves and some ferns (made from the fronds of some cheap, toy palm trees), and ended up with something a little more suited to the legendary Ghost Who Walks!


A Devil Of A Dinosaur!

TYRANNOSAURUS REX by Polar Lights
Built 2/2018
Painted 10/6/2019

I've had this kit assembled for a long time, but I didn't get around to painting it, because I didn't really have a clear idea of how I wanted to paint it. But after the Gorgo build went reasonably well, I kind of wanted to paint up another big lizard, so I pulled Rex down from the shelf and hit him with some primer. I ended up basing my paint scheme for this bad boy on Jack Kirby's Devil Dinosaur comic book creation. In real life, the red skin looks a lot darker and redder, but this is the best I could get with the camera I have.

Not a lot to say here - the kit went together easy as pie, and I'm even happy with the paint job! I'm especially proud of the lava!


Sunday, July 28, 2019

Flashback '78: The Long Patrol

COLONIAL VIPER by Monogram
Built: 1978

This is the first of several posts where I'll show off some of my few surviving spaceship models from my childhood. This dusty Battlestar Galactica Viper is a vintage Monogram kit, built when I was a sci-fi loving lad of only 15 years-old.

I always had trouble with cement and decals back then (and, in truth, I haven't yet tackled decals with any of my new builds yet, either). When applying the red stripes, the decals tore, so I decided to justify the mistake by making the fighter look extensively battle-damaged.  This was accomplished with some clumsy drybrush and washes, and when I was dissatisfied with those results, I actually took a Bic lighter to it!

You can see a few spots where I held the flame too long against the model, causing the styrene to melt (ah, such fumes!).

I have purchased the more recent and much more accurate Viper kit from Moebius Models, though it remains in its box in my stash until I feel that my skills have improved enough to tackle it. 

Before I take photos of any of my other vintage builds, I'll try and dust them off a bit!


The Kind From Up There!

FLYING SAUCER by Polar Lights
Built 7/21/2019
Painted 7/27/2019

My second flying saucer build in one week! This kit is a repop of a vintage 1950s Lindberg model - the first ever U.F.O. plastic kit - that has been reissued dozens of times over the last sixty years from numerous companies, including Glencoe, Atlantis, and now, Polar Lights, as a tie-in edition with Ed Wood's Plan 9 From Outer Space. Wood used several of the original Lindberg kits in that notorious film, so there is a legitimate connection.

I chose not to build it as it appeared in Plan 9 (minus the rocket motors and a painted-over dome), but as it was originally intended to be built.

Another simple build, with only a few parts, and most of the paint applied with a simple rattle can. I had originally intended for a shinier "chrome" finish, but the paint I bought - labeled as "Chrome" - was actually more of a matte finish than I hoped for, so after it dried, I hit it with a few coats of clear gloss. It's still not what I intended, but I'm satisfied with it.

The little green alien pilot and cockpit details were hand-painted.