This phenomena led to yours truly having at least a dozen harrier jump jets in his possession at one point (now trimmed down to half a dozen at last count). I still can't remember buying that many; I can count on one hand how many commission jobs I've had for a jump-jet so it wasn't a business decision at any rate. Short of them breeding and multiplying by themselves in the cupboard - the reason for accruing so many will remain a mystery.
Now the stash is getting bigger again, due to a combination of a prolonged period of ill health and my other line of work being a higher priority over the Winter months. The new stash theme seems to be focused around big multi-engine aircraft including 1/72 Lancasters (3 of them), a Shackleton and a couple of Dakota DC-3s...... and a few B-17s in various scales.
In a moment of madness on a certain online auction site I also acquired a Soviet Mil Mi-26 Halo Helicopter from Zvezda in 1/72 - many tins of Russian AF paint shall be required for that particular beast.
However the workbench is not quite ready for airliners / bombers / transport planes / big helicopters just yet.....
Airfix Fairey Battle (Old Classic Tool) - Part of the Victoria Cross gift-set. Went together very nicely and looked good when finished / sent to it's new owner.
Airfix Hurricane II (Classic Tool) - Currently a test-bed for different varnishes. I have 'lost' one or two otherwise perfect models thanks to varnish reacting to the paint coat underneath - so whenever using a new formula/product it pays to test it on a low-value, easily replaced model first.
The 'Car Park' - This is where the models sit in the sunshine to dry and generally cure.
Bristol Blenheim Mk I - Old and New - Recently I finished off the Blenheim from the VC set - despite being an older tooling it went together with some filler and modern paints/transfers applied. It took about four days from start to finish - out of professional interest I bought the new tool from Airfix to see how much easier/quicker the new one went together. Currently at the un-boxing stage.
Keep your eyes peeled for some of these appearing online soon (I need the space!).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.