As you can probably see from the contents of my blog, the US Airborne has always been a favourite subject of mine so I decide it was high time to revisit the uniform.
At the time I was pleased at how my attempts came out but always felt I had never really captured the elusive colour of the M1942 jump uniform, fast forward a few years and many experiments I (hopefully !) have something that looks a little more like the image in my head that I wanted to portray.
There was obviously a great variation in the colours of both the uniform and the equipment, as these re-enactment photos show.
My earlier efforts were more on the lighter side but I wanted to try and capture the warmer tones of the figure on the left in the top photo.
I suppose Band of Brothers had a little to do with this, it's de-saturated style seemed a lot more gritty and gave it a more authentic feel.
So this is my previous palette, you can find a full rundown on the construction of this Dragon figure here and the full paint guide here.
And this is my latest attempt on one of Alpine Miniatures' sublime figures.
Here is a rundown of the paint palette I used, mostly Vallejo Model Colour but a few Lifecolor (UA Prefix) and one AK colour. As it turns out, the main one.
M1942 Uniform
Base colour - AK3076 Canvas Tone
(this can be substituted for a 50/50 mix of Vallejo 988 Khaki and Panzer Aces 317 British Tank Crew but it's easier out of one bottle)
Highlight 1 - add UA430 HBT Light Shade
Shadow 1 - add UA422 Wool Olive Drab
Shadow 2 - add 887 Brown Violet
At this stage I used a filter of 880 Khaki Grey to try and bring in the mustard colour to the midtones. Once happy with the overall colour I enhanced the highlights slighty by adding a little 845 Sunny Skintone and darkened the shadows by adding Andrea black.
Reinforcement Patches
Base Colour - 80% 830 Field Grey, 20% 988 Khaki
Highlight 1 - add more 988 Khaki
Highlight 2 - add 972 Light Green Blue
Shadow 1 - add more 830 Field Grey
Shadow 2 - add Andrea black
Equipment
Pretty much anything goes here with the webbing and equipment, the trick is to mix and match different complimentary colours and tones to separate the equipment from the uniform but to retain the colour harmony.
Webbing
Base Colour - 879 Green Brown
Highlight - add 976 Buff
Shadow - add 941 Burnt Umber
Ammunition Bandolier
Base Colour - 924 Russian Uniform WW2
Highlight - add 845 Sunny Skintone
Shadow - add Andrea black
Afterwards I thought this looked a bit too similar to the uniform so I gave it a filter of 967 Olive Green to try and bring it back to a more greenish tone.
Waterbottle
Base Colour - Panzer Aces 314 Canvas
Highlight - add UA430 HBT Light
Shadow 1 - add 887 Brown Violet
Shadow 2 - add Andrea black
Rifle (Metal)
Base Colour - 50% Vallejo 721 Burnt Iron, 50% 950 Black
Highlight - add more 721 Burnt Iron
Shadow - Scalecolor Black ink
Rifle (Wood)
Base Colour - 50% 872 Chocolate Brown, 50% 846 Mahogany
Highlight - add 876 Brown Sand
Shadow - add 872 Chocolate Brown
Glaze - thinned Scalecolor Chestnut Ink
Boots
Base Colour - 50% 872 Chocolate Brown, 50% 875 Beige Brown
Highlight - add more 875 Beige Brown
Shadow 1 - add more 872 Chocolate Brown
Shadow 2 - add Andrea black
Glaze - thinned Scalecolor Chestnut Ink
The ink gives the boots a slight sheen whilst imparting a really nice red leather tone, once dry any scuffing or additional highlighting can be added using 819 Iraqi Sand.
Once I decide what I am going to do with this fella I will add some weathering to blend him into the chosen base, other than that I think he's about done.
Obviously I'm not daft enough to paint on the 101st Airborne badge, this is a dry transfer from Archer Decals, blended in with a very thin wash of the base colour.
So, a slightly different colour palette, and I think I prefer this one.
Until the next time..
Excellent report and awesome painting. Yes the elusive colour. You appeared to have nailed thank you. My favourite unit in WW2 especially the M1942 uniform.
ReplyDeleteThanks Geoff, glad you like it.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous work. Keep it up!
ReplyDeletefor the reinforcement patches you list a base color, two highlights, and two shadows. Can you please explain how you manage to fit 4 separate color schemes on a little patch, be it there are four of them? thank you. would really like to understand this.
ReplyDeleteBase is mixed from a dark colour (field grey), and a light colour (khaki). Varying the ratios gives a lighter or darker mix; your basic colour theory. Highlight and Shadow colours are just variations on the base colour. By adding more khaki it lightens it giving you Highlight 1. Paint this on then add light green blue to this mix creating Highlight 2. Similar thing with the shadows, adding more field grey into the original base will darken it for Shadow 1, adding black into this creates Shadow 2.
ReplyDelete