
The Chieftains often had camo nets around the barrel - so I'm hoping to make this...






Just been mulling this over Bruce... the answer is yes I guess, I've rarely just got one model on the bench. Too many ideas and not enough time. I don't often build a 'Dual Build' like this one, where I'm actively building two kits in parallel. But I do just jump from one to another - glue a few parts on one and then whilst that's drying do a bit to the other. I'm sort of trying to keep them in pace so that they both get to painting at the same time - and then I can set up my airbrush.speedgraflex wrote: ↑Wed Mar 12, 2025 3:01 pm Cheers, Stuart! What a great pair of projects. I definitely feel I need to try something like this. I tend to focus on one and only one project. What’s it like for you to switch back and forth? Not to be too silly but do you take a break between each or just move from one to the next? Honestly I must be dense. Have you always worked like this?
Certainly manufacturing and design have changed dramatically since the 70s and 80s. Building the kits is much the same, although techniques have changes and we have a vast amount more materials and subjects now - so it's less about scratch-building and kit-bashing and more on AM and the best use of various materials. Personally I like the old methods more, so I've been reading a far bit of Shep Paine and Verlinden recently.speedgraflex wrote: ↑Wed Mar 12, 2025 3:01 pm I believe there may be something of an established tradition for model building. Recently I have been watching history videos on model making companies—Airfix, AMT, Aurora, Monogram, MPC, Revell—and I really see how different it was to build a kit during the Seventies, even the Eighties and how it is now.