Thanks Rob! I’d already sealed the fuselage by the time I read your comment. I’m not too familiar with dry brushing anyhow, but I’ll be looking into it soon with my next model. But thanks for the advice! [Y]
Psycho. Thanks bud, I’ll get that pic for you when I get to that part. It looks like it should be ok, but I’ll tell you right now the gap you need to be worried about is the one between the two fuselage halves! A few people have mentioned this already, but once the interior is installed and the two halves are connected, it’s like gap city all around. I dry fitted mine like 10 times, I was able to close most of them prior to gluing, but it’s still gonna take some manipulation. I should of gone with my first thought-- initially I was gonna leave the entire interior outside of the plane, to give the inside it’s due presentation, but decided not to at the last minute. When you build yours, I say leave the entire interior out, dress it up REALLY nice and make it a separate piece from the plane. It’ll pay off big time with connecting the plane and all the hard work you did on the inside won’t have to only be seen by way of pictures. [t$t]
Bish. Yeah my hobby store here was sold out of all of the acrylic because they’re going out of business, so I went with the ol’ hair spray method. Crazy me totally forgot to seal the chipped parts with the flat finish, before applying the hair spray, but thankfully, I was only working on the propeller blades at the time. It actually didn’t turn out too bad! I had to touch it up a little bit because it stripped down to the plastic color in a couple parts, but it was a super easy fix. [|-)]
Starting out…

Here, I was beginning to realize I forgot the flat finish, but as you can see, it wasn’t terrible.

Still, I wanted to touch it up, but then called it quits so as not to over-correct. Could of been a lot worse, but thankfully I have bunch of propeller blades from old “I give up” models laying around from way back when lol.

And then super random, but I thought you guys would like this. I put this in my little guy’s nursery since he has an aviator themed bedroom-- A Tuskegee Airmen version of the P-51D (I did the red tail markings myself), chasing a Messerschmitt 109. The aerodynamic bank the 109 is taking is a little ridiculous but working with fishing line with my arms in the air was painful and annoying as the 109 kept twisting about.
