This work was inspired by pictures of some F-18A that the Ejercito del Aire bought to the U.S. Navy to replace a few crashed aircrafts. This plane previously belonged to VFA-127 “Desert Bogeys” adversary squadron (previously known as “Cylons”). Once in Spain, the Navy markings were overpainted with the yellow used in Spanish “lizard” camo and then the “211 Escuadrón” markings were added, this produces an interesting three tone camo with the low-visibility grey zones typical of the adversary fighters. The work became a long time project with plenty of detailing and scratch (engine bays, avionics bays, undercarriage, cockpit). The painting was made with Vallejo´s Model Air acrylics and the weathering with oil paints, watercolor pencils and graphite. The subtle riveting is airbrushed with templates or drawn with pencil (depending on the area).
Diego Quijano.
Diego Quijano.
Great modelling Job
ReplyDeleteWonderful!!
ReplyDeleteJAW Dropping!
ReplyDeleteWOOOAAWWW!!!Awesome!!!
ReplyDeleteFantastic work! Su trabajo és muy exquisito! Felicitaciones!
ReplyDeleteThis detail cannot be implemented not even in 1/1 scale!!! Amazing.
ReplyDeleteFantastic detail work, grt DJs Scalemodelling
ReplyDeleteFantastic job an extraordinary superdetailed model which i would like to had in my collection...
ReplyDeleteHow long it takes the model to finish??
Hi George,
DeleteGlad you like it. It took me about a year to finish it. :)
That is absolutely stunning. (I mean jaw-droppingly so.)
ReplyDeleteThank you Mick :D
DeleteOut standing work it is wonderful model love the f18 hornet
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely brilliant work, I have just started to get into the fine detail stuff, what do you use for the wiring, fuel and hydraulic lines.
ReplyDelete