This thread describes the build report of the three Wingnut Wings Albatrosses.
Two D.Va and one D.V.
Well, a Roden Albatros D.I is also ?running? alongside.
I started with this model sometime in the 1st quarter of 2009.
It went well for a while, but some mistakes had crept in - apart from windsock data files, there was hardly any usable image material on the Internet at that time regarding the D.I.
At some point I put this model away because I got my hands on the first wingnut kits.
Well, three or four years ago, I had done a few hand-finishes on the model in between, but I didn't really fancy this model.
Now, between the Christmas holidays, the wind seems to have changed - as I continued building the three D.V/D.Va, I suddenly started to enjoy working on the D.I again.
But, sorry for the short digression - let's stick to the model:
The fuselage of the Roden Albatros D.I got its plywood grain today.
Not papered, so no decals - everything is painted by hand.
Base color Mr. Hobby "Radome".
The rows of nails were shaded very thinly with Tamiya "Desert Yellow".
Light fogging of various panels with Tamiya "Desert Yellow" and "Flat-White".
Some panel lines, the vent fittings, positions of the maintenance covers (i.e. where they will be located later) and areas underneath the engine which will receive traces of oil later in the construction phase were thinly shaded with Tamiya "Smoke".
99% of the wood grain was done with oil paint "Siena natural".
It was important that each panel was painted separately with wood grain.
The grain should therefore not overlap onto a neighboring panel.
Less oil paint makes the panel appear slightly lighter, with a little more oil paint - only slightly more - the wood grain appears denser and richer and makes the panel appear slightly darker.
In addition, some Siena Burnt was mixed into the Siena Natural in various places to obtain different color nuances of the grain.
So much for the current status.
Now it's off to the dry dock with the fuselage for a week.
The engravings on the individual wooden panels are a little deeper and wider on the Roden model than on the Wingnut.
That's why more oil paint accumulates there.
I suspect that you can save yourself a final wash with oil paint - although in real life the joints between the wooden panels on the Albatros are hardly visible.
Depending on the angle (e.g. from front to back), you often can't see these joints at all, as the wooden panels are mounted overlapping from front to back.
If you look from back to front, however, you can see the end edges of the panels on top - but ultimately they aren't joints.






Servus
Bertl
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