Showing posts with label Moebius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moebius. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Back in the Saddle
Alrighty! I have my garage all set up now and my paint booth built. I have actually finished one project since doing so. After a year and a half of no model building, my hands have forgotten how to make what I see in my mind. There were a lot of missteps and goofs while doing this one. Here is a quick video peek at the finished Cylon Raider. I'll post some good Pics if I can manage to get home from work before the sun goes down sometime this week.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Confessions of a Styrene Addict
This will be my lengthy introduction first post. After this I will try to document the builds as I do them.
When I was a kid, I loved to build plastic models! I built cars, tanks, airplanes, ships, spaceships......whatever I could get! I built models all the way up until I was around 30 years old. Then I got married and had a kid; I no longer had any money to build models.
I got the bug again 12 years later when I found the videos of Steve Neill on You Tube. This was a year ago. It was then that I realized that I was never very good at building scale models. This guy was doing really cool things with LED Lights and doing cool paint jobs with an airbrush! I wanted to do that, too! But could I? I didn't think so, but I was going to try.
Steve and I have since become friends. On top of being a fantastic model and prop builder he is also a really down to earth, nice guy.

I had an old Monogram Battlestar Galactica stored on the garage that I had slapped together many years before. I got that out and pulled it apart and stripped all the paint off. My Father-In-Law was into electronics, so I had access to a soldering iron, solder, wires, switches, resistors and some power supplies. I then went to radio shack and bought some LEDs.
I wired it up, rebuilt it and repainted it (I didn't have an airbrush yet). I still didn't know what I was doing paint wise, but I got it together and it was lit, darn it! It wasn't pretty, but this was my first model with LED lighting! I was very happy.

I then tried my hand at some small Star Trek kits. My first attempt was the small Polar Lights U.S.S. Enterprise. I didn't put any lights in this one. My focus here was learning how about filling gaps with putty and sanding, priming and painting, clear coat and decals.
I screwed up on the decals, though. I didn't know about laying down a layer of clear gloss before applying the decals. It was Mr. Simon "Papa Smurf" Mercs of The Kit Factory who set me straight on that problem. Simon is a very high end, high quality model builder. His work is absolutely phenomenal, but he isn't above helping some poor schmuck like me do his decals right!
I then tackled some of the small 1:2500 Star Trek kits. I still didn't have an airbrush, but these were all about learning how to decal properly. I started with the Three Enterprise set and then did the Enterprise-C.
I finally got a cheap Chinese airbrush and compressor on Amazon and got to learning how to us it. My first attempt at airbrushing was on the 1:2500 Enterprise-D. I was happy with the results.
From here on I felt confident enough to tackle some bigger, more expensive kits. I won't go into any more detail for each one. I'll just show you the results and the progress I have made in my skill level. Each model I do gets better and better, but I still have a long way to go!
When I was a kid, I loved to build plastic models! I built cars, tanks, airplanes, ships, spaceships......whatever I could get! I built models all the way up until I was around 30 years old. Then I got married and had a kid; I no longer had any money to build models.
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Steve Neill's Garage |
Steve and I have since become friends. On top of being a fantastic model and prop builder he is also a really down to earth, nice guy.
Beginning Again

I had an old Monogram Battlestar Galactica stored on the garage that I had slapped together many years before. I got that out and pulled it apart and stripped all the paint off. My Father-In-Law was into electronics, so I had access to a soldering iron, solder, wires, switches, resistors and some power supplies. I then went to radio shack and bought some LEDs.
I wired it up, rebuilt it and repainted it (I didn't have an airbrush yet). I still didn't know what I was doing paint wise, but I got it together and it was lit, darn it! It wasn't pretty, but this was my first model with LED lighting! I was very happy.

I then tried my hand at some small Star Trek kits. My first attempt was the small Polar Lights U.S.S. Enterprise. I didn't put any lights in this one. My focus here was learning how about filling gaps with putty and sanding, priming and painting, clear coat and decals.
![]() |
The Kit Factory |
I then tackled some of the small 1:2500 Star Trek kits. I still didn't have an airbrush, but these were all about learning how to decal properly. I started with the Three Enterprise set and then did the Enterprise-C.
I finally got a cheap Chinese airbrush and compressor on Amazon and got to learning how to us it. My first attempt at airbrushing was on the 1:2500 Enterprise-D. I was happy with the results.
From here on I felt confident enough to tackle some bigger, more expensive kits. I won't go into any more detail for each one. I'll just show you the results and the progress I have made in my skill level. Each model I do gets better and better, but I still have a long way to go!
Re-Imaged Moebius Battlestar Galactica
1969 Chevy Camaro
Psycho House
Pegasus Hobbies T2 Aerial HK
Starcrafts 1:1000 USS Akira
AMT/Ertl 1:1400 USS Enterprise-C
Moebius Original Battlestar Galactica
Next up I will try to document my build of Revell's U.S.S. Voyager!
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