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wook1138

501st Stormtrooper[TK]
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Everything posted by wook1138

  1. Welcome to the FISD, Alan. Yeah, the first few cuts are terrifying - but it does get easier. lol. Going slow and cautious is a good approach, but keep in mind that most mistakes can be fixed. A great way to get advice from the community is to start a build thread and post lots of pictures. Good luck on your build! https://www.whitearmor.net/forum/forum/80-anh-build-threads/
  2. I had the same thing... it was the battery. Yes, easy to replace.
  3. The "painted with the ears on after botched paint job with ears off" reveal. Inspiration http://www.starwarshelmets.com/2009/ANHstunt_2005.jpg
  4. So, I've been trying to figure out the right color of the helmets. White paint is not white paint. If they used automotive paint in the 70's for these buckets, the whites had a yellow tinge due to the limitations of the paint production at the time (it was very hard to make durable true white paint that wouldn't yellow due to sun light). So knowing that I wanted to prove that the buckets are more yellow than the ABS armour. I've grabbed some screen shots - I tried to color correct as much as possible (the color is greatly affected by lighting, filters on the camera if used, the Kodak film stock, color timing during film processing, and digital post production shenanigans that have happened over the years). The images then had the saturation dialed up a bit to help show the difference. It is impossible to know how much more yellow the paint was than the ABS, but it was very likely a lot more than what we normally see on screen. Also, the paint is likely more reflective than the ABS, giving is a stronger value or brightness in some lighting cases. No, I didn't alter the buckets in any way.
  5. Some minor paint chips. The paint is a bit thicker than ideal and still a bit soft - so I'll have to go back and make the chips look more natural at some point. I'll also take a wire brush and try some finer scratches too. I'm not going for an exact replica, but I'm using this bucket (Tantive IV) as reference. He's the one on the right of the image below (sorry Leia, sort of has that crazy ex-girlfriend-from-The Blues Brothers-look going there)
  6. Hey @CableGuy, I think I got it sorted. Performance White by Duplicolor seems to have the right balance of the creamy color. And I got my gloss back. Crappy colour in this pic now that I look at it. Oh well, looks better in person.
  7. You know, I have not seen this video - I will check it out tonight when I get home. The bonding/etching primer was based on something Simon at RS mentioned on FB - the bucket was hard to strip the paint off (if I read his post correctly). I got the feeling he suspected the studio applied some manner of etching primer. So I did the same. I also didn't want the paint coming off if I had to so some masking for the traps/tears details and tube stripes. The ears are based on the "stop that ship" bucket images. I am of the school of thought that the buckets were painted by AA with the ears off (Maybe some on? mix match?). Then they were stripped at some point. Studio (?) re-applied paint - I assume red oxide primer followed by white (I just went with the gloss over the primer) - with the ears on. I can't imagine the "stop that ship" bucket being done any other way. Mind you, It's possible that some buckets didn't have the ears on, so... I'm not convinced any one way is the gospel at this point. As for the drips, I intentionally went for it. I had a nice even base coat of white - and I must admit it was a bit painful to deliberately add the drips. But now that it is done, I love it. The whole idea with this build is to show how rough these helmets were up close and in person. This is why the dull finish is confusing to me - the paint is on fairly thick. Anyway, I will try a "whiter" paint tonight and see how it goes.
  8. Thanks Dan. I actually feel a bit better about the color - the AP is very stark white and almost greenish compared to most other kits (I'm not sure how it compares to RS). It makes Anovos ABS look beige when compared directly. So I think I'm closer than I thought with the color, but still not quite there. The dupli-color is very handy here - right off the shelf of my local hardware store. But I think I may need to actually hit up as automotive paint shop as Glen mentioned or start combing the internet for some paint. For the matte appearance, it looks worse than it is (probably due to the back lighting) but it is more matte than I would like. I don't know what is going on. I'm getting a matte finish (in places) but the paint is gloss. The layers are nice and wet. I might have to try some light sanding to see if that works. I did use a plastic bonding primer over the HDPE - I'm not sure if that is affecting the top coat. I tried testing a bit of clear coat over the paint - way too glossy IMO. FYI - my approach to the painting: I did a layer of white acrylic lacquer with no ears on and then stripped away the paint (only around the ear area so I can display without ears and have that classic look). Added masking fluid for planned paint chips. Put ABS ears back on I did a light coat of plastic bonding primer. (adding bonding primer to the ABS ears was probably not the best idea - there are some pretty strong solvents in it). Red oxide primer. white acrylic lacquer. Just based on what I've done, I'm starting to wonder if the oxide primer should have been used on that first layer that got stripped off - the effect under the ears didn't look quite right. And then I'm wondering if the red oxide was ever used once the buckets were stripped (which I believe they were after AA painted them). I have trouble seeing evidence of the red oxide primer under paint chips on auction images of screen used helmets, but I can see some red oxide rimming some of my chips (this could be the fact that I just can't see this detail in images). I assume the boys (Rob et al) at RS would know - and I believe they use the red oxide primer. Anyway, a learning experience... as usual.
  9. Hi all, So I painted my ANH TK bucket. I researched some possible shades of white that might have been used. I was under the impression that automotive paint was used so I researched some possible colors. I know @CableGuy mentioned he used a Ford Diamond White by Halfords. I tried to find something similar in Dupli-color (they don't have the exact same colors). I picked a "creamy" looking Ford white that had a code found on older 1970's cars. It is called Ford Pure White (C,9E,YG). It looks far more beige than I was expecting. Determining color from images is almost impossible - especially from screen captures. So does anyone have any idea of what shade of white the original 1970's HDPE buckets were painted with respect to Dupli-color automotive paints? See images below - am I way off base with the color? The bucket compared to a white piece of paper. My painted "Tantive IV" inspired HDPE bucket on the right, my AP bucket on the left
  10. I have resin cast helmets with the same thing. I’ve never had an issue, but I covered the inside of those buckets with Velcro.
  11. I don't know, some of those screen shots from the Tantive IV sequence... . Thanks Dan!
  12. This has probably been discussed already, but I didn't immediately see anything in a quick search, so... The CRL does not explicitly mention anything about painting a stunt TK bucket (from what I see). The materials list at the beginning of the CRL imply the use of white fiberglass/ABS/PVC/HIPS/etc. Is a painted stunt bucket approvable? Keeping in mind that the finish and color are going to be different than the material used for the rest of the armor - much like the screen used suits. I saw a related question on FB and I didn't know how to fully answer. Someone wanted to know if people purposely paint their buckets a slightly different shade of white to better match screen used suits. I assumed this would jeopardize approval if the shade was too different as the CRL tends to go for "what the costume was intended to look like". Thanks
  13. Ok, you can blame @Frank75139 for this... one more entry. This one includes a patch version too. and the patch...
  14. Welcome to the FISD! Good luck with your ROTK build!
  15. You could print some Rogue One TK armour, paint it up, and be the model for the live action version CRL. Honestly, I have no idea where things are at with the live action CRL - all I know is that it looked awesome in the Mandalorian. EDIT: I actually read the rest of the posts - I see you are getting armour from Jim. Nice! Disregard the printing part then.
  16. Awesome work! And double congrats on centurion and #500. I also dig that it is with an AP kit.
  17. ABS is far more common... so I assume it’s for a reason. check this out: myself, I prefer the ANH stunt. The original TK.
  18. Thanks. I took some of your ideas and came up with this multi-plated metal design. I’m also playing around with a 3D design for the front... sort of. And yes, thank you @starsaber25, let’s see some other designs.
  19. Hi there and congrats on your gift - awesome gift indeed. Couple things I noticed that might help: It looks like you could pull your chest piece down (tighter strapping to the ab piece may be needed). This will pull your back, kidney and butt piece up a bit. It will also help with the placement of your shoulder bells. Shortening the straps that go from your chest to back may help this too. The thighs are probably a bit small - that is why they are hard to pull up. If so, the first thing I would do is trim away the return edge at the top of the thighs with lexan scissors or similar - this will get you some more room if they are tight at the top. Can you close them at the back? Ammo knee pack get rivets (single cap are fine) and the sniper knee gets glued on (no rivets there). Check out the build section for a ton of info. I assumed you are going for ANH stunt. Do some reading before you start any serious trimming or other alterations. https://www.whitearmor.net/forum/forum/80-anh-build-threads/ Good luck
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