Whoops, I just realized I had posted this particular German recon unit on here last year. Oh well.
Never hurts to show off the eye candy again. A year ago was sooo long ago! Nice work. As usual for you.
"It is a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step into the road and, if you do not keep your feet, there is no telling where you might be swept off to."
I had the chance to go to Thailand for work in 2013 and visited an allied war cemetery and camp where the POWs were forced to work on the bridges over the river. Striking to see men’s headstones listing them as being stationed on the Prince of Wales, I presume they were rescued and then actually captured when Singapore fell... graveyard was beautifully kept of course abs it was very touching.
That is a very interesting story about the survivors of the Prince of Wales. The same sort of tragedy happened to the survivors of the USS Houston which was sunk early in the War during the Battle of the Java Sea. I have had a book a few times in my store which tells of that story.
Thanks very much, Beagle! none of the aircraft I have ever painted are currently owned by me. I hope to change that in the future as I have a fair number of WWII aircraft and a few Modern aircraft and helicopters in my unpainted collection.
Here are a few more from the Modern era painted for GHQ and photographed by Nicki.
The MiG-29 at the bottom was my first attempt at doing aircraft in this scale. Probably the most frustrating part of painting 1/285th scale aircraft for me is putting on the decals. Aside from national markings, tail codes and other markings are not readily available and I had to do some cutting and pasting to get things to look reasonable. The Jolly Roger insignia on the F-14 was provided to me by Tanner Simmons aka WWII Central.
Here is my IJN Shinano that I painted for GHQ a few years ago. The deck decal was graciously provided by Tanner Simmons rather than me having to cobble together some markings from miscellaneous decals.