Thanks for sharing, I've always had trouble with figure painting, but when I do Dioramas they need to look good, so I definitely will put your steps into play with my figurines. Great Job BTW! Looks great!!!
@@MrTigMilitaryModels the colour is field grey, all your reference images show it to be more green than the grey blue you have? The figure represents an officer, they had access to better quality uniforms than the enlisted men whose uniforms really did vary as the war went on.
Hey, I heb zelf al heel wat Duitse tanks in elkaar gezet incl wethering enzo maar nog nooit 1 figuurtje geverfd(bewaar ze wel allemaal) misschien toch maar eens een poging gaan maken mbv je video.Thnx
German tank crew or panzer crew uniforms were often black or tones of black/dark grey, but their uniform colours also depend on the year, the climate (like winter uniforms such as white tone jackets or reversible jackets) and if they were WSS (they often had access to better and more varied camouflage uniforms, like pea dot pattern). I think painting camouflage can be harder and take more time, and generally you need a colour photo to copy it from. If you look up ‘panzer crew uniforms’ the images might give you some help. You can also see some examples in my latest RU-vid video that has some German tank figures called “Get Ready for the next battle resin diorama WW2 Sturmgeschutz IV tank Sd. Kfz. 167 Normandy 1/35” or the German crew in winter uniform on “Realistic diorama Tamiya German Flak Bastogne WW2 1:35 full build”. Many thanks!
Thank you Raffael, appreciate your positive feedback! The paper is baking paper, also called parchment paper (comes in a roll and used for oven cooking - from supermarket)
Hi I use Tamiya Modeling Brush ProII. Item 87172 (ultra fine) and Tamiya Modeling Brush HG. Item 87154 (extra fine). They are expensive but I find you can’t get fine detail painting without them. Thanks