I've acquired a couple of road vehicles for Hexworthy, a ubiquitous Transit van and a Land Rover Defender. Both are nicely detailed models by Oxford Diecast, with interiors, UK number plates, and rubber tyres, but they are rather too shiny and clean...
- Rubbed down the paintwork with very fine emery and a fibreglass pencil to tone down the shine
- Cut off the mounting screw mounts under the Land Rover, as its high ground clearance made them visible
- The Transit van got dry-brushed rust (enamel) paint around the wheel arches, sills, gutter, and some panel edges - not too much, just a hint suggesting a long life
- Plastic bumpers were painted, almost black on the Land Rover and dark grey on the Transit van
- Window recesses were touched in with black paint where not already painted black
- A dark brown wash was applied and partially rubbed off, filling panel gaps and toning down the paint slightly. A black wash was applied to the wheels. I've started using Vallejo washes, they're convenient and work well
- A muddy brown was then airbrushed along the sills and around the wheel-arches, and up the rear of the vehicles from below, plus a little on the tyres
- Finally, the bodies got a spray of Testors Dullcote (with headlights masked) before being re-assembled
The Transit van is on 1989 plates so I gave it heavier weathering with touches of rust showing through, and faded bumpers (the black plastics of vehicles of that era seemed to fade to grey very quickly). I also painted the interior a darker shade of mid-grey as it seemed a bit pale. It is lacking wing mirrors which I may have a go at making, but they would be rather delicate.
If you take a look at the English detective series "Vera" you can get a good idea what a proper weathered "Defender" Land Rover looks like
ReplyDeleteNicely done. So many die-casts on layouts are over-weathered I feel, especially when it comes to panel washing which can over-emphasise the door gaps.
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