pr-rt-r by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
The weathering is complete for the Special Hobby Morane Saulnier N. As I tried to explain in the last build note, the use of black basing is intended to create a base coat with a high degree of tonal variation and some of the original effect is still visible. But I've done a lot fiddling since.
Fist I gave the kit a gloss coat for decals. Some modelers think that's unnecessary, but I was concerned that 14 year old decals accompanying a problem child kit could be dicey especially for the tail. As things stood the decals did go on - the two for the tail were much too large but trimmed nicely. The roundels seemed okay, but proved very fragile. Fortunately there was an alternate tricolor marking for the fuselage which I didn't use that supplied materials for patches. (One bit came off under some masking tape after dried 48 hours and covered with a matte coat - that shouldn't happen.) In retrospect I should have not assembled the tail but black based it separately and then airbrushed on national markings across the board. But once the tail was on, there was no turning back.
Next came a matte clear coat. This was needed for the oils. (I find oils much better than enamel products - if nothing else, they don't interact with acrylics.) The first step were two filters. Almost all of my oils are Gamblin "Fast Matte" which are designed to dry very quickly and dry matte. Gamblin also accompanies a proprietary mineral spirit called Gamsol. Gamsol is remarkably benign - it has zero odor and no tide marks: ideal for models. The filters are very heavily thinned - figure 10% paint. Unless put on a matte surface the filters wouldn't work at all. But if done right you can "fine tune" the base coat and give it some depth. I used two filters: one of Yellow Oxide and one of Burnt Sienna. Because Gamblin dries so quickly, a 30 minute pause did fine. After that came a wash of black and burnt umber. Figure maybe 25% paint for a wash. Because I use filters the wash is applied carefully - mostly along the ribs on wing and body. Ideally I don't want excess wash, but a separate brush is ready Gamsol to remove some. With the filters and wash down, I pretty much know what I'm dealing with. Next comes adding tonality - mostly with fading. I do not use dot filters. I think fading is much better done with straight up oils with the brush only moistened with Gamsol. Where I wanted to fade I'd use either simple titanium white - applied literally with a toothpick - and rubbed into still mostly matte surface. In some places I mixed some burnt sienna or even umber with a buff and put down a darker patch. None of these faded areas are bigger than a dime. The idea is to mix things up - add depth - prevent a uniform finish.
Here's what the kit looked like before anything described above was done:
Base by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
Here it is after the decals and oils:
filt-oils by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
Next I masked the front end and painted the front end black with Golden High Flow Carbon Black - a very good paint with a powerful pigment. There's not much to do to vary tonality with a black as dark as Stalin's soul, but I had noticed that many MS N that carried the big spinner (again, needed to make a bullet and fulfill Red Baron memories) had a proper case of chipping. For a light and irregular chipping I am very partial to the use of salt - in this case simple table salt. First I hand painted the front end with Vallejo Metal Color aluminium. Next I misted distilled water all over the front end (I did the spinner separately) and shook on some salt and pushed it around a little. After drying, I airbrushed on the High Flow which, as usual, goes down perfecto.
I'd like to make a note about the paint - and feel free to disagree. High Flow is satin/gloss when dry. It's also a water based paint and creates a kind of film - which is what I want. As good as acrylic lacquer paints (Tamiya, Gunze, MRP) are I'm not sure that most weapons painted for service use looked as though the paint had changed the color of the surface - like what you'd want in a new car. Rather I think they looked like painted objects. Water based acrylics look like paint has been applied over something else. The difference is subtle after weathering but it's still there, especially if you see a kit in person.
Anyway, after the paint dried, I brushed off the salt and ended with a nicely chipped front end. This is a forgiving technique - I found some of the chips too much, so I used a very fine brush and did some editing. The result is about what I wanted:
chipping by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
Lastly I wanted to soil the plane without making it goth. (I found a couple of pics of a MSN in Soviet service - it looks a complete mess. Some of the best modelers out there specialize in very severe weathering - knocked out tanks, abandoned aircraft, rusty cars etc - it's a genuine skill. But that wasn't what I wanted.) For inspiration I watched a 60 second video on YT of a MSN being moved out, mounted by the pilot and taking off. The little thing was kicking up dust galore and exhaust poured out of bottom of the engine. (The angle of attack on take off is impressive - the N model MS was originally a race plane.) The pilot also did some acrobatics to get into the cockpit - I'd guess Lewis was right about this plane being made for a pilot about 5'6" - and that would leave some proper scuffing over the weeks. I also kept staring at buckets of photos of linen covered early war planes. The DH2 below is typical of what I was thinking about:
dh2soiled by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
To get where I wanted to be I turned to Iwata Com.Art paints. Com.Art is a very popular brand for professional airbrushes who "paint" on paper. The stuff is marketed by the best airbrush maker on the planet, so it does have a place. But the texture isn't ideal for plastic. I use transparent colors - usually transparent smoke - so the opacity is very low and it has a grainy texture. It feels almost grimy. So I airbrushed the stuff all over the plane in a kind of mist - this is a common enough technique for any acrylic but Com.Art is made for it if you want to emulate a general grime. After that I took a small "streaking" brush and applied an irregular coat mostly along the fuselage and the wings close to the fuselage. Underneath I used Com.Art "old oil" mixed with a little Klear and gave a proper oil streak from the engine and back. I also used some pigments just to soil the underside. And this is what we get:
pr-rt-ft by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
Here's a detail pic:
PR-det by
Eric Bergerud, on Flickr
Next up - rigging.
Eric