I've been doing an awful lot of railway modelling lately, and felt like I needed a little palette-cleanser. And with May the 4th, Star Wars Day, coming up, I threw this together at about a weeks notice.
I'd picked this kit up online; I already had a toy X-wing in the same scale bought about the time Rogue One was out, and had a smaller Revell X-Wing in the unbuilt kits box.
The Revell kits were well-moulded in some senses, but there were loads of moulding points, pips, and a bit of flash to clean up.
Interestingly the smaller-scale one is pretty well identical to the larger, just without the ability to pose landing legs, but there are a few bits (like the engine intakes) which the smaller one does a bit better.
A problem I had was that the mini kit, bought about 12 years ago, had long lost its canopy, so I had to quickly manufacture a replacement from plasticard. The Rogue One toy X-wing had a solid canopy, so even though the larger-scale kit had a transparent cockpit glass, I ended up modelling all three fighters painted solid, to match.
I left all three fighters in their base plastic colour (this needed to be a project done in a hurry to meet not only the deadline of May the 4th, but fit in around a busy week at work and a build for a mag too). I copied the toy with regards to detail painting the red and cream, and some gunmetal on the engine exhaust cowlings, then washed all three over with Citadel Nuln Oil to bring out the panel lines and give some texture.
The squadron lined up... interestingly there are some details the toy one does better than the model kit as well, and some where it's a little cruder. Still, it would do for the pics I had planned...
Last year, I did some pics for Gerry Anderson day, and then some more for Warhammer, with aircraft kits photographed out on location, as if they were in flight; no photoshoppery and minimal post-production, trying to do as much as possible in-camera, so I built a rig to 'fly' them off. I wanted to more of the same this time with the X-Wings...
Ah, duct-tape, the Technicians Best Friend. The rods for the aircraft are a pair of telescopic aerials for radios, the top ones (the rig would need to be inverted) are garden canes, because by this time I'd arrived at the shoot location in Wales, and couldn't get anything else locally.
The rods inserted into thin plastic tubes, cut from 1mm syringes (we have thousands of these at work, out of date stock our department has ended up with).
I needed a few last background details; these were built literally hours before we set-off for the Bank Hol weekend in Wales. Two torches, some housepipe connectors, some plumbing parts, food lids... Cobbled from bits in the 'useful scrap box', we have the defensive towers. As you can see from the silhouettes too, the sprues from the kits were also re-used, more on which shortly...
So why Wales? Well, I'd had less than a week to build the X-Wings, I certainly didn't have time to build a Death Star. Luckily, Criccieth, a few miles from where we'd be staying, has this rather brutalist bit of sea defence work on the north beach...
A Long Time Ago (yesterday morning, in fact)
In A Galaxy Far, Far Away (Criccieth, West Wales)
With a rather handy drainage channel, which was about as close to a Trench as I could think of for the pics. I'd used it before as a canal in a project, and it seemed ideal here with a bit of set dressing.
And here we go; a bit of minimal work in post-production with the brightness and contrast largely hides the various rods holding the fighters up.
For the gun turrets, I used transparent plastic drinking straws, which are illuminated by the beams from the torches, to look like laser beams.
"Stay on target..."
"I can't manoeuvre!"
"Stay on target!"
More playing with the brightness and contrast with a huge slab of concrete, to try for a starfield backdrop.
Shame about the tufts of grass, but I liked the slabs as a backdrop too.
A nice, fun little project; I took some more, using the beach for a direct "Rogue One" reference, which I'll post separately later in the week :)


























































