Guy, this is really getting exciting. Are you sure you can't delay your trip? I want to see what you do with all these wooden parts.
Maybe we should start a separate thread on this painting topic.....
Placing the model in a diorama such that it is best visible from a constrained viewpoint might accomplish painting with the light as required. I don't see how one could do this otherwise.
This is a really good point and one that has confounded figure painters for years: you paint a figure as if it's in a specific type of light, say Zenithal, which casts imaginary highlights and shadows, but then you set the figure down on a table at a show and the ambient light creates actual shadows. Our colleague the Red Baron has said he does his "Zenithal lighting with a light", and he has a really good point......would that we could all take lights with us to shows and cast the exact amount and direction of light on our models that we choose. With the increasing flexibility and transportability of LEDs and battery packs, this may soon be possible. The one sure way to do it is to create box dioramas....but more on that later and in a separate thread.
Re: the Stage Make Up look of some armor builds, I agree totally. Steve Zaloga's builds are, to my eye, the most realistic mainly because he seriously studies armor and the way weather and battlefield conditions affect it. Many of the other guys, especially the Euro crowd have really gone too far.
My concern is that the same process is beginning to creep into our work with WWI aero models. Someone started to highlight the rib bulges in the wings, which is absolutely correct, but now we see a lot of builds with an almost striped look on the wings. It's like the WWII guys did with panel lines....someone put some
subtle wash into a panel line and made it look more realistic. It grew from that to where many of the builds these days looks as if someone took an ink brush and ruler and inked in all the panels, even the raised panels.
OK..sorry if I seem to be ranting. I think the future is extremely exciting and a lot of wonderful things are already happening in bringing the level of realism of these kits we build to new heights. As more people with more knowledge join the conversation it will really take off.
Cheers from NYC,
Michael