Progress has been made.
The lower and upper hulls are complete and glued together.
Every single one of these kits that I have built so far have been a pain in the @ss.
The fit of some parts are great while some are.. well...not.
As long as the weather is nice on my next day off I will be able to start painting as I should have the kit fully assembled by tomorrow night.
The ship is assembled. However, it needs a lot more care in the terms of putty work than what I was expecting. Painting will begin this week, just not today.
Very overcast today so I could not get any outdoor photos.
I did take a few indoor photos without flash and hand held the camera.
The reeftank is in this room so there is spillover light from it when I took the photos. Sorry about that.
Let me be the first to chime in that this is absolutely stunning work.
It takes SOOOO much work to put together one of these lit up Star Destroyer models and yours always looks so incredible.
I have a Randy Cooper one and the guy I bought it from had done an Anigrand as well for a client in Canada. He swears he will never do another Anigrand again . . .
Apparently, the RC version is a bit easier to work with from a model builder's perspective.
Question... when the lights are in recessed areas, do you cut them flush with the surface, or as close as you can get. If it's flush with the surface, how do you do that? I can't see how you'd get anything in there to snip them tidily.