Hi all, long time since I posted any content here that didn't fit into one of my logs, buts here goes.
Today I've been playing with a model my boi, John from
The Painting Bunker gave me after he won it in a charity auction for
Legacy, a charity here in Australia that supports the widows and children of ADF service members who have tragically died.
It, for anyone who doesn't know, is a Sha'tari Jaguar, a faction in a 10mm Sci-fi game called Drop Zone Commander invented and produced last year by Hawk wargames. Initially I was really excited for this game and John and I had many discussions about it, and how cool the models were.
Unfortunately at release I wasn't able to get any, and my interest waned while I got into 30k.
When John showed me this model I was struck by the lines and the eldar-esqe design philosophy. Then he said I could have it as long as I painted it and blogged it. So here we are.
Much has been made by the creators of this game about their resin technology, and its superiority to any other resin on the market. Unfortunately I seem to have been given a dud. Whilst it wasn't as bad as the worst finecast I have ever seen, it would be about average for that troubled product.
There were several air bubbles, and miscast pieces, in one case along the back of the model I had to carve out the triangle depression that should have been there. This did however demonstrate to me the quality of the resin when cut, it cuts beautifully, again similarly to finecast. Where this is superior to finecast is in its elastic qualities, I've dropped this thing from considerable height and its bounced, without breaking a single leg or weapon.
It also drilled really well, taking magnets for the turret and the waist of the walker incredibly well.
To paint it, I tried a technique using masks. In this case a series of pieces of flyscreen, which is a plastic mesh put over windows to keep bug out.
I primed the model with Tamiya grey surface primer, then laid the screen over the area I wanted colour and sprayed through the screen leaving the impression of grey lines. I did this with a Purple/pink, then enchanted blue, then yellow.
I then sprayed the bottom white, using the screen to leave the grey lines for interest. The rest was brush work, using golds and silvers from
GW, before gloss varnishing and oils, then dullcote to protect the finish and stop the oils rubbing off.
Finally just a shot to show the scale of the model.
Overall I would give this model a 3.5 out of 5, the detail is crisp and easy to paint, the design is cool and different, and the material is easy to work with.
Thanks for looking.