'Photos attached of a Garrison Miniatures spaceship (you will have to tell me which actual ship it is from the Garrison range). (It's a Star Raider) It was a break from painting SS panzergrenadiers. If the German army around 1942 had spaceships, maybe they would have looked like this.
Okay, it is a practice run for my WW2 German tanks, aiming to reflect the kind of camo patterns they may have used before the introduction of the dunkelgelb base, but more interesting than just dunkelgrau. As discussed on Saturday, it would be more accurate if I:
1. Lose the brown
2. Possibly add yellow
3. Lose the edge effect (I might prefer it aesthetically, even if it is less historically accurate)
4. Emphasise mid-tones on the grey more, to reduce contrast and give a less shiny look
The glow effect around the engines is the first time I have tried such a thing. It didn't work particularly well, and certainly didn't photograph well.
I can probably make the base a bit more interesting too, for example, making some of the stars brighter and adding colour swirls to reflect a nebula (although photos we see of nebulae are all false colour anyway. In reality, they aren't visible to the naked eye. Again, it is a trade-off between realism and aesthetics).'
For more details of this range, see Lost Minis Wiki.