Lyle! I love Aurora kits; these aircraft, the sailing ships, the monster figures and the science fiction kits. I just... think these reflect my personal joy of model building. Not prototypical navel gazing. With these kits the builder gets to be imaginative. To problem solve. To misbehave, a little. I’m thinking of Firefly. To be a heretic. To be a little bit or a lot of crazy. I feel the way I do when I am in the Walt Disney designed portions of Disneyland: full of curiosity and ambition. I don’t feel like an infidel. I feel very American in the very best sense of who we are.
Carlos! Your work with translucent layers of oils looks beautiful; subtle highlights, and color shifts. I like the overall effect for its glossiness. To me this looks like well-varnished wood. I agree with Clint that the section which is seen of the cockpit will benefit from the work you are doing.
Today was... I had a lot of personal issues today. I didn’t do as much as planned. I sculpted a new version of the seat cushion. I repainted the interior sides where I damaged the paint. I fitted the cockpit, removed the molded plastic lip around the cockpit which I will replace with another sculpt in Milliput. I opened up the cockpit opening. I tacked the fuselage halves together; sanded then primed; sanded then primed; sanded then primed.
This looks like a dimple. I see these a lot of times on the AMT Enterprise Warp Nacelles. I guess it is a sinkhole that I missed during my first assessment.
I also love the plastic, I can practically carve this like a block of wood. I love that the edges thin out without falling apart. I also always cut off the locator tabs and nibs in order to decide what is the best fit for my needs.