Planebucket
Moderator: Community Manager
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- Posts: 663
- Joined: November 1st, 2010, 2:17 pm
- Location: Back in Italy...
Re: Planebucket
@ citizen lambda : yes unfortunately the 505 seems to be crowded around the cockpit in this scale, i just marked the doors darker due to evidence them, then every livery will have its own darker shade for the doors, not just this kind of grey.
@ adenandy : stay tuned!
@ adenandy : stay tuned!
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( http://shipbucket.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=8293 )
( http://shipbucket.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=8293 )
Re: Planebucket
Philippine Navy helicopters:
AW109 Power:
AW159 Wildcat (ordered, to be delivered as of this writing):
AW109 Power:
AW159 Wildcat (ordered, to be delivered as of this writing):
- citizen lambda
- Posts: 467
- Joined: March 2nd, 2016, 8:30 pm
Re: Planebucket
Looking good!
Are both original designs or just adaptations to PN colors? If you have done the overall model from scratch, I just have to ask: wouldn't the Wildcat look more interesting with shading to show relief, particularly the shape of the tail boom? This is IMO the one distinguishing feature of the AW159 and deserves proper highlighting.
Or is there something in the Planebucket rules against relief shading?
Are both original designs or just adaptations to PN colors? If you have done the overall model from scratch, I just have to ask: wouldn't the Wildcat look more interesting with shading to show relief, particularly the shape of the tail boom? This is IMO the one distinguishing feature of the AW159 and deserves proper highlighting.
Or is there something in the Planebucket rules against relief shading?
Soviet Century/Cold War 2020 Alternate Universe: Soviet and other Cold War designs 1990-2020.
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Re: Planebucket
@citizen lambda: May I ask what you mean with 'relief shading'? As English is not my native language I'm not familiar with this term.
My deviantart account
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
Re: Planebucket
It's just the existing drawing in PN colours which could really do with a re-draw. I'd attempted to upgrade it but nothing worth uploading.citizen lambda wrote:Looking good!
Are both original designs or just adaptations to PN colors? If you have done the overall model from scratch, I just have to ask: wouldn't the Wildcat look more interesting with shading to show relief, particularly the shape of the tail boom? This is IMO the one distinguishing feature of the AW159 and deserves proper highlighting.
Or is there something in the Planebucket rules against relief shading?
AU Projects: | Banbha et al. | New England: The Divided States
Blood and Fire
Blood and Fire
- citizen lambda
- Posts: 467
- Joined: March 2nd, 2016, 8:30 pm
Re: Planebucket
OK, I really have to stop using that term, you're the second to ask in as many threads on the same day...Cascadia wrote:@citizen lambda: May I ask what you mean with 'relief shading'? As English is not my native language I'm not familiar with this term.
This is just about the lighter/darker shades being used to highlight the relative angles of the canted surfaces. For a baseline tone on a flat (facing the eye) surface, other surfaces tilted towards the light look lighter, and surfaces tilted away from the light look darker. Nothing fancy or original on SB, I just use "relief shading" as a shortcut (up to now). This is used everywhere on ships (see all modern ships with oblique superstructure sides) but I don't know how prevalent it is on planes.
Soviet Century/Cold War 2020 Alternate Universe: Soviet and other Cold War designs 1990-2020.
My Worklist
My Worklist
Re: Planebucket
Ah, I see. Actually, I think the artist try to give new planebucket drawings a proper shading, but due to the size of most planes in this scale it is not so easy.citizen lambda wrote:OK, I really have to stop using that term, you're the second to ask in as many threads on the same day...Cascadia wrote:@citizen lambda: May I ask what you mean with 'relief shading'? As English is not my native language I'm not familiar with this term.
This is just about the lighter/darker shades being used to highlight the relative angles of the canted surfaces. For a baseline tone on a flat (facing the eye) surface, other surfaces tilted towards the light look lighter, and surfaces tilted away from the light look darker. Nothing fancy or original on SB, I just use "relief shading" as a shortcut (up to now). This is used everywhere on ships (see all modern ships with oblique superstructure sides) but I don't know how prevalent it is on planes.
My deviantart account
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
Re: Planebucket
A modest addition: J29 Tunnan. Great plane itself.
Re: Planebucket
Breguet 941S
Cessna O-1 Bird Dog (including SISI-Marchetti SM.1019)
Savoia-Marchetti SM.82
Cessna O-1 Bird Dog (including SISI-Marchetti SM.1019)
Savoia-Marchetti SM.82
My deviantart account
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
http://cascadiasb.deviantart.com/?rnrd=191663
- Oberon_706
- Posts: 207
- Joined: April 1st, 2014, 12:17 am
- Location: Sydney, Australia
Re: Planebucket
Well done mate! there are fantastic.
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DCFI (Falkland Islands) AU Nation
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Current Worklist;
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