Superb! The quality of the painting and attention to detail really shows on this Panther as well as the King Tiger you've done earlier. Top shelf, your care and love of the craft truly shows through in your work!
I would love to see more of your other works! You have great modeling talent, editing talent, and camera handling talent which is a combination you don't see very often! I'm sure you already know this (but just in case!), but the audio of the entire last portion of your video is clipping. If you lower the levels of you recorder, whether that's your computer or a discrete piece of tech, and then bump them up later in post, you'll get a cleaner track. Your stuff is great, can't wait to see where you go!
Miniac thank you! thats quite a compliment. about the voice level, yeah, it might be Final cut pro that caused the problem, the voice was ok when previewing and it changed when i output it. But surely i'll pay more attention next time
Excellent representation of the Bovington Panther G, other than that, I was hoping you would paint it in Ambush Camouflage, but there's always a next time.
Love to watch your great paint/waethering jobs, man! However the icing the cake is missing imo: a turret number... giving it more personality. Keep up the good work!
It is a pity that these tanks are no longer in service, the beauty of these ancient combat vehicles does not compare to those of today, it is pure beauty and art of the German engineering of those times.
My. That could be the very tank in the room with Robert Shaw in the 1965 film "The Battle of the Bulge." Recall in the Hollywood classic, Shaw plays a kampfgruppe commander and is with the high command staff at the movie's start. And an approximate 1/6 scale (or so) tank exists in the room where staff is discussing Wacht Am Rhein. It's a little bit late to get this replica put together for that Hollywood blockbuster. Fantastic effort however.
The most famous tank today is the Tiger I (or panther 6) 131 at the Tank Museum. I hope you will have the pleasure of obtaining one for painting! I guess tank popularity has increased since the World of Tank game :)
Not panther, Panzer vi but yeah I really love Tiger it may not have actually performed as well as hoped but the shear fear the allies felt and it's awesome 88mm gun is enough for me.
Love your work. Excellent paint job and nice weathering. Although I have never seen a photograph of a Panther with the German cross on the turret. Usually a three digit number would be there. Is that an Armortek model?
I do prefer the longer format of the KT video, could be even longer than that as far as I'm concerned : p But still lovely video thanks for posting and great build : D
Love it man, and let me guess.(Comment before I watched the video) Camo Based on the panther tank in bovington Tank Museum? I had made a panther 1:72 with the same camouflage today How crazy is that?
Weltmeister Not that it's wrong just used to seeing the cross up front on the fender just above the track. I believe sometimes they put the cross on the turret but, usually it was more forward on the hull. As I said absolutely incredible job. I could only hope to be as good a artist as you. Btw how much does one of these tanks cost?
i have nearly the same type of fictional camo, but in 1/16. I know its very small but i can take them easy to my car :D ..And its not that expensive like big tanks in 1/6. but yes i wish i had one Panther in 1/6 :D
Brilliant but you should have used red oxide primer as the base , then dunkel gelb that was how the Germans done it. Not to take away from the build same results in the end. Keep it up
Vasili Hi, thanks for watching! Im also a tank nerd and been in and out the real thing quite a few times. Im aware the base is oxide red. It’s just because the car primer I had is grey, and it’s super tough after baking. Also, it doesn’t make any difference in terms of end results :)
Your totally right, results speak for itself , and tbh I just assumed it was all steel but that's not the case probably more alloy than steel. I hope you didn't take my comment as a negative that was not my intention. Iam lucky I have bovington tank museum that's close to me Regards Vas
I love these extremely late war schemes, when germany was so desperate on tanks and so short on paint that they literally started sending tanks out in their primers and only adding tan and green on the go.